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The Raymond 


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The News and Advertising Mfedinm c^f Southern Alberta*g Sugar DUtrici 


70L 6 


RAYMOND ALBIRTA. FRIDAY. JAN 6 1928 


NO. 48 



\jN ro^ Of 
jue iVo/?!©. 
AT 

(BANff 


Close-Out PricesI 

We have a number of lines we arc closing out 
before stock-taking, and arc offering specials on 

Men’s Overcoats, Ladies’ Coats and 
Dresses, Children’s Coats, Remnants, 
Dishes and Silverware 

We ask you to see our goods and 

get our prices 

THE BTO DEPARTMENT STORE 

Raymond Merc 

COMPANY, LIMITED 


We have some very handsome 

Mantel Clocks 

Guaranteed for 5 years 

Priced at $10.50 and $12.50 

Big Ben Alarms $4.50 
No. 9000 Alarms $1.65 

All Repair Work Guaranteed 

Collett & LaMarr 

Jewelery and Repairing 


Dll yoti Ntill write it 1927 t 

'I'Im* Reooiid ward M I. A. wil 
fituKo tin ooinefly, “A Full Houho*' 
.Lnniary 18. whon the name of thf 
play in hoped for. Joe MeI.aMtn 
and Minn Ruth Holt are ntarrinp, 

Itorw—To Mr. and Mrs. Am 
j 8eoville, a daughter. 

! • 

Mr. and Mrn. Duncan Weaver ol 
lhlrM^^ell Hpent tlie holidayn hen 
with relativcH. 

Mr. Strattn, a young man froii 
(ih'iiwodd in hero for the purpos. 
of pn'Heiitiiig blue print plann foi 
a heel topi>»*r which he has invent¬ 
ed aful patented. His machine 
works on the principal of two re- 
v(dving screws wliich draws the 
tops up to the knife hlade ns the 
implement im>ves along a I'Ow. 

And now tlie new Chevrolet is 
I nnnounccd. The battle betwem 
Henry Ford and General Motors 
is on. The public will reap tliR 
benefit. 

The hnNketball season opens to* 
I night when the local intermediates 
j will engage t ho Cardston liiterined 
I iutes in tlie first leagn.e game of the 
j season. The preliminaiy game will 
consist of a scrap Ixitween the Ag- 
' gie team aad the local “Aces’*. The 
' game will bo played at the Opera 
I House. 

Tuesday ushered in a delightful 
' warm wave following one of the 
! coldest extremes ever witnessed in 
the province. On the samo dai 
Cardston experienced a lieavy rail 
fall. 


Banff Winter Carnival Will Be Coloii'ul Event 




1 - 

llsidt, ihe capiuo ul Canuda'd Na- 
^ tional Park of that name, is 
known to the world us one of the 
most beautiful and faucinatinff of 
summei resorts It is, however, 
not gvnerully known that Banff in 
wintei It equally delightful, and 
that many people prefer it at this 
season, especially during Its Car¬ 
nival Week The dates for this 
cn|«»rful event are Fcl>ruary 4-11. 

I ite town IS always a blaze of 
colored lights: Indian tepees are at 
intervalii along the main street, for 
the Storey? also take part in Win¬ 
ter’s pageant Fireworks gleam 
on the Ice Palme from which many 
events will stait They move q dek- 
ly and are kaleidoscopic in -olor 
and swiftmiii*. iforls ire varivt and 
masquerade? are an additional ex¬ 
cuse for more excitement and 
hilarity ® 

There are mai.y comf’^tition* in 
aU Ur»es of spoils during Carnival 


ANt Mt. ^ONVLg. 


Week, and even sportsmen will have 
their fun, for trap-shooting is on the 

f irogramme as the Banft Gun Club 
loldj its annual competition at this 
time. Another novel event for a 
Winter Carnival is packing, making 
and breaking camp, and also the 
famous diamond hitch Is staged by 
members of the Rocky Mountain 
Guides Association, who evidently 
are not afraid of rivals during the 
next annual meet of the Trail Rid¬ 
ers of the Canadian Rockies. 

Skiing is possibly the most nupu- 
lai sport, and the country affords 
.ill that could be desired. There arc 
competitions In ski-jumping for pro¬ 
fessionals, amateurs and young 
boys: ski-racing, ski-joring races, 
snow-shoe faces and novelty events. 


fANCV 

^ 5V>9 rr/? 

-— /9AHff 

Hockey, Canada's great national 
gome, is one of the drawing cards 
of the Carnival. Teams come from 
all parts of the West to compete, 
as many clubs enter for the 
and figure skating; among them 
the Winnipeg Skating Club. The 
Banff Dog Derby is one of the out¬ 
standing events which should be 
mentioned. The course, from Cal¬ 
gary to Banff, is 84 miles. The 
annual bonsoiel of the Banff Curl¬ 
ing Club will be held during this 
week. Recreations are so numer¬ 
ous that all visitors can find the 
form of diversion that pleases One 
great novelty is swimming in the 
Government hot sulphur baths in 
the oi>en air, with snow and, pos¬ 
sibly, icicles around. 


The iiuiM'iMgc of Mins 
^o1h- 11 to Mr. Shirlej Kitiai*y wns 
soU^tntiized IhrI TiitHdny wutiing 
it Ij«(lihril>g«* ith Binhoii Hiram 
8mith offii-intiiiK- Their ii)an.\ 
'rtends wish tluMii much hniipiiieac. 

The derth of Will Stark occurred 
lu ^he Galt hoapital laat Htiuday 
ih^rtly afU'i* he had hpon ruahed to 
Lethbridge from here. Mr. Hlark 
whi>«e home was in Iowa, wrp 
tuite well known to farniera in 
thin difttriot, uiul wan coinited a 
cInHM tlireahermaii. Funeral 
services wen* held on WediieNday 
at the ChriatenHen funeral home. 

WorkhaHlM'on started in pre¬ 
paration for the erection of the hig 
departinentnl sloi’o to bo built on 
the block of land recently pundi- 
R'led by the T. Fiaton Co. lAd., in 
Calgary Actualoonatriudion work 
it. is stated, will commence in the 
spnng. The total cost of the land 
and the hnilding in expected to he 
[in the neighlH>rliood of n inillinn 

I 

! dollars. 

, 

Mr. and Mi-h. A. M. Wilde, 
pioneers of tlio Welling district, * 
oelehrated their golden wedding 
recently, (^ii tliis their fiftieth 
: wedding anniversary tables were 
set for 75. 

Joseph Little son of Mrs. Harry 
Lightfoot, diwt last Monday at 
r^thbridge. His stcpfatlier, Harry 
Lightfoot, was buried a few days 

I ago. 

I 

Local ladies, nundiering 15 gave 
i surprise party for Mrs. Fred 
Piepgrass at her home last Wed¬ 
nesday afteriuxin. Refi'eslnnonts, 
a program, and games made a de¬ 
lightful afternoon. 

I Suggestions from an}' responsible 
I quarter on the revision of the 
j School Act, now in progress, will 
j be welcomed hy the Department of 
Education, announces Hon. Per- 
i*(*n Baker, Minister of Education. 
VV'orkin connection with the re¬ 
vision of the Act covering the o|>er- 
ation of Alberta Nch<M)lH is now go¬ 
ing forward and officials of tlie 
department arc anxious to have 
any communications on the sulijei^t 
sent in at as early a date us poa- 
sihle. 

Gonlon Brewerton, of the Caid- 
ston Palace I'heatre, was a visilir 
here last Tuesday. 

Tlie contract for the fish hatcli- 
cry which will bo constructed in 
the Watciton Lukes National Park 
at a cost of some $15 OhO lias been 
awanledto Uiand Scott i>f Card¬ 
ston. The exact location chosen is 
near the Kootenay River bridge 
and it is expected that the hatch¬ 
ery will be ounipletciJ by April 1, 
1028. Gamtf fish fry propagutul 
ill this liutohery will be used to 
stui.'k a nnniber of rivers and lakes 
ill the south part of the province. 

Robert Graham will shortly 
open up a new garage in the 
O’Bj'iea building whicli is Ixing 
remodelled in preparatiun. Bib 
will soil “Chevies.” 

Shortage of water of water w'ns 
again experienced in some parts of 
town. Mayiii’Cope worked luird- 
er than anyone in getting tlio 
pumps working. 

Mrs. Wm. Paris entertained ut a 
six-course dinner on Wednesday, 
January J. Tlie occubion was her 
birtliduy aimiversary. Covers were 
laid for eight. Tlie guests present¬ 
ed the hostess with a beautiful cut 
glass spoon tray and iiTidescont 
cream whip. 


Tonight Only 

The Valley of the Giants 

WITH MILTON SILLS 


SATURDAY ONLY—TOMORROW 
LON CHANEY IN jyj^ 

AND TWO REEL COMEDY 

Bognlar Prices 


MONDAY NEXT 

lUloM JACK MULHALL 

man v^razy dorothy mackail 


STARTING THURSDAY NEXT 


ZANE GREY S 


Open Ran^e 


Coming; Thurs. Jan. 19 - STELLA DALLAS 


Shoe Sale 

Saturday Only 


We will give 


20 % Discount 

Off Our Entire Stock of Shoes 

The Broadway Store 


Our January 

Sale 

Starts Tomorrow (Saturday) 
Ends Saturday, January 14 

Values in Sweaters 

Coat Sweaters in plain red and white.Sale $4 86 

Men's r<oll and \ -neck Sweaters, up Co $4, Sale $2.26 
Men,s Sweater (k>ats, V-neck and with collar 

reg. $6 60 to $7.60 ..$6.46 

Men’s Sweater Coats, V-neck and w ith collar 

reg $7.00 and $8 60 ..Sale $6.96 

Men’s Lixtra lieavy and Jumbo Knit Sweat¬ 
ers, reg. $1100^. Sale $8 76 

Yourhs’ All.wool Pullover V-neck Sale $3.26 

Boys' and Girls’ I teavy Checked Sweaters 

sizes 24—34. reg. $4 36 to $4.60 Sale $3.46 

Roys’ and Girls' Meavy Cdicckcd Sweaters . 

reg $4.00. .. . .. .... Sale $2.96 

Boys’ Wool Suits, reg. $2.26 . . Sale $1.80 

Ladies' Wool, and Silk-und-\\ ool Sweaters . 

values to $8.00 .Sale $4 76 

# 

Other Specials 

Boys’ l-ined Leather Mitts. Large 40c, Small 30c 

Men’s Spats . .. Sale $1.00 

Men’s Forsyth Shirts, values to $3.00 , Sale $1 96 

Striped Flannelette 6 yards lor..$1.00 

Striped Idannelettc, heavy grade. 6 yards for. $1.26 

Bennett & Co. Ltd. 

THE PEOPLE S STORE 


♦ V*. H 








1 


THE El'.COI.'DEIf. EAV-MONP. ALTA. 



No Disfiguring 
Blemishes to Hide 

irC’tilicura Sonp is used ^aily. adsistrd 
by Ciitk'ttni Ointment whei) necessary. 
They do much to prevent blackheads, pim¬ 
ples utul oth^r unsightly eruptions, and 
\ to promote pernunent skin health. 


a««fl« Ckrk Tr** Sv Mkll 
Staihovf*. Ltd . M*ali» 4 J ' 

■J. »|ltl I >«! •'»!» ‘JJ'l* 

t'utirura Shseinc 5tick 2Sc. 


AiMrr«a t'BnKil>an Di^paI: 


Proposed Medal For Lindbergh 

IliKlKHt AttanI In tin* \\orM lYom 
the IlnnilH Of Alrnirn 


o' 


the 
% 

Inlotna- 


Fake Necc?.«« ary Precaution? 


Thf • ilranti (loUl Modal ’ 
I'Vdi'ration .\oi‘onautuiuc iniotna- 
Uonalo, tvorUI Koverninjf Innly lor air¬ 
craft po! fonnancoH, was^'rojHvuHl fdV 
('harloH A. I/indlH'rph by Porter 
AtlaniH, proshlcnt of the Katlonal 
Aoronaiitics A npoi iat ion. 

Tho modal is dosciibtHl i\» Iho hlph- 
o.st awanl In the world from tlio l ands 
of airmon, and it Is planned to have 
It nwardod to IdndborKh at a mooting 
of thf Fi'doiatlon in Paris, st>on. Mr. 
Atiuma’ rocommontluMon was made Ui 
a letlor to Paul Tissandior. axTclary- 
Rcnoral of tlto Kodorntion. 


X 


t-’aiKulian.^ havt nt» ioH*H>n to apolontzo for Iho fltniatc of tholr n.tmtiy, 
even in porto l.s of sovon* wintor cold; t>n the contrary they arc* protnl of the 
fact (lull, in .'<n many iv.'^pccl.-H. the t'anadian winter is a very real as.^c' to 
the noinlii.on. ’I'lirrc Is nothing; enervating alx-uit the cliinnto of t’anada. lo 
It IS due th.* high ipiality of the gram priKiiieod. It is largely ros|>o:i.‘»ible ft'r 
llu* fact that ('anuiiiauM are a hardy, mlnist. healthy p''Ople. full of in.’Jitivo 
cjm vitergN. It i.s not a elimatc itt which idlers and slaekor.t survive, tonso- 
curntly It devidops a progios.sivo. iiuhiitrloti.s pooi’h*. 

Ihit jti-Jt as in the tropics people must exoreiso eortain prctautions duriUK 
S 'lux of Inten.m' lieat. so nuist ('aiiadians take proeautions during periods 
of intense eohl. ei in stormy .^eason.s. To neglect emniuonsonse pr'caidp'ra 
•it siu li lime.M is to invite disa.ster. 

Ihiring a Miy^.aid which recently taped aero.ss a inution of We.detn 
(\inada and tlie Weslein T’mled States, a little lad of seven years waa 
allowed to leave itis home for the rural s» hool he attended some riislrn-.e 
away. He lo.^t his way. beeanu* utterly exhauated, and his death r sul'ed. 

Such a trmrody is the re.snlt of not taking the very natural preeautiv>n of 
keeping a yomig ehilU hom«‘ at sueii a lime. H was foolhardy in the extreme 
t«‘ allow the ihild to venture out. 

Tin* Sa.<kat« hewan Depaitinent of Kdueulion has issuetl u ttmelv v.ain- 
ing to parents ;md teachers to cxefei.^e care in permitting children to ]>ro- 
teed to and from school in very severe cold wcalhcr. when strung winds joc- 
\ li! during se\ero told tu a blizzard threatens. TUo Departmental wauiing 

points out that "it is lietter to keep a child home than to risk a tragedy, or. Or. Williams' Fink Pills lliglily 
if adverse we iiher t hanges tneur thiring st hool hours, to tlotain th-' -.hihlrtn Praised By a Quebec Lady 
in the.scheol huii.-^e until they c.aii l>c safely conveyed home." Mrs. David O'gan. Thetfo'd Mines 

The advice is given tliat "ut such times parents may well ttlenhone the 'Ve.st. Quc.. gives unstinted praise to 
ii A. her stating whether their ehihlrcn are or are 
li '. hers shouM. in like manner, telephone parent 

t'eing dota ned at the St iK'ol until sent for. or that they have l>cen art. d for nr. Williams' Pink Pills for many 
home under escort. 

As contrasteil witli t onditiems only a comparatively few years ago. when 
riiial IcUphunes w'ore few and f«r l>otween, the prairies id Canada lac i ow 
(r ss-crossetl with rural telephone lines. Ncaily every rural s< hool ins a 
b I. plume installetl, and an instrument is to lie fo ind in the gre.at 
oi i.irin liomes. (lotnl use shuuhl be made of them In the manner 
by the Saslcatehewan Departiucnt of Kducation. 


Conference On Wireless 

Imperial i«o\ernmeiit To Invite 
Kepreseiital 1% es Of l>o.itititftn 
Tlu* tfovcniiucnts of the Prilisb 
Ikvininions and India have boon In^ 
eti by the Imperial tJovoriimenl 
name reprosoiilntlves to atteu.l a con- 
fox‘cnce in London with rcgird to 
que.stions relating to cable ami wire¬ 
less lommunications. according to a 
statement by Postmnsler-tloneral Sir 
Williams Mitchell Thompson, in the 
House of Commons tinlay. The con¬ 
ference is to be railed as soon as prac- 
lleable. tlie postmaster-general said. 

THE BEST MEDICINE 

SHE EVER USED 


A Self-Contained | 

I 

Empire 

Itrilaln la Itetter PnMitloii Than Any ; 

Other t'mintry In World I 

Hir Alfred Mond, whose kiuvvlodgo 
of world-wide trade Is probably im-. 
ixtualled, has liecn speaking about the 
Rrltlsh Kmpire. and reltcral'ng bis 
views concerning it. which he brought' 
forward nonio time ago. These re¬ 
mind us very much of the Imperial 
Z«illvereln. which was propos-'d many 
years ago by that brilliant and far- 
seeing stnlcsnmn, Jo.srph (.‘hamber -1 
lain. Mis pro]>oBal was that the Km-, 
plre should, as far as po.sHlble, l>c-' 
come a .self-sustained one, and that is 
prarllcally what Sir Alfro<l Mon I de¬ 
sires. lie p.iints out that In natural 
letMiurees the Dritlsh Kmpire Is more . 
self-contained than any other coun¬ 
try in the world, ever *iic T'ntlcd 
Ktates; his opinion reganling this 
state of afltiirs in the Statc.s may not' 
pat liciilarly please the Americani. ns 
he says their country, ns lompared 
with the Hrilish Kmpiie. is "a trilling 
proposition scarcely W’ortli regard-^ 
ing.” He wishes to sec the Kmpire 
trade within itself, and with a tariff 
by which Hreut Hritniii cun trade with 
South Africa, ('aiuula. New Zealand 
ami .Vustralia. creating a free econo¬ 
mic development within the Kmi>lrc. 
not merely in buying and selling, bui 
in general development and in in- 
creascil ivopulalion. 

Japan's Richest Man 



on’t dose 
a Childs 

Gold 


French Savings Restricted 

When Hank Account KvceeiW I.lmlf 
IlrposKnr Musi Wiilidraw 

E\cess I 

AUhoiigh the French people nre | 
noted for their thrift there are a mini-1 
lier of savings bank regulalivm.s that 
win strike the American savings de¬ 
positor ns poeullnr. I 

Individual deposits are limited to ^ 
francs while for mutual ihirl-' 
ty societies or trade unlon.i they are. 
limited to TiO.OOO francs. When an 
account exceeds this legal limit, lho| 

Iwink Informs the defH>sitor to wiih-| 
draw the excess. j 

A iloposltor can have but one pass 
iKiok wrthin the territory of the j 
French Hruhllc. The penalty for in-i 
fringement on this rule is lo.sa of In¬ 
terest. the forfelte<l intere.it being 
credited to Iho savings bank where ^ 
the dopotdtor had his money. ' 

A married woman who earns tu» in- ’ 
come is subjected to variou.s restrlc-' — "■ ■ ■ • ■ 

lions In Iho unniniits she nniv .h pos Prehistoric 

it, but If she has mi income of her u; i i • 

own she is no more rcstrt.lod than Indu&triOUt 

her husband. 

A minor may deposit money, but he 
cannot withdraw it until he icarhes 
the age of .sixteen, without the an-, 
thorizulion of liis legal represcatative. 

Conditional aceountH to bo paid at 
majority, at the time of marriage or 
at some other staled date may be 
opened, but the sums can led arc in-, 
eluded in the amount •allowed each! 


COKTINUAU 
dosing upsets 
children's delicate stomachs. 

Vicks is applied externall/ 
and therefore cannot disturb the 
digestion. It acts in two ways: 

(1) The body heat releases 
the ingredients in the form of 
vapors which are inhaled. 

(2) At the same time Vicks 
"draws out" the soreness like 
a poultice. 



VAPOR UB 

H^MiilJONJMSUSa>Y£Amjt 


I’i^hlcr 


Man U (irkcr Ah Well .\h 
S a.VH Dr. Anil 

Dr. H. M. Ami, F.K.S.K., president 
of the Canadian School of Prohistory 
^'lame. who rcnently returned to 


in 


the Ikmiinion with .'i.OOO .qpec!nien.‘» 
illustrating the evfdution of man’s in¬ 
dustrial Implements, claims that man 
has been an intelligent creature for 
‘150.000 years. He saj'S prehistoric 


depositor. 

The savings hank rcsi'ivos the always engage in fight- 

right to limit individual w itlidr itT.ils 


to .50 francs a fortnight. 


dUs may well tch'niione me c.si, gi\ej unsnnte.l praise to 'pko richest man in Japi 

not cn ixmto to school, vhtlo Iw*;; Fills for the g-xnt ^ ,^07 iiu-ome Hvx 

. »» . .1 . 1,1 . •hey have done in her fumilv. Mrs. ^ 

ents that their children nic ..j user ol ^‘"ron Hisaya Iwasakl. h 


Itaroii IwanaUi Has An liu'oiiie Of 
S^.I.-H.OOh ^ early 

The richest man in Japan, accor.l- 

rolurn.s. is 
head of the 


alw.tys fouml thorn a nio.st reliable 
medicine. My husband, who was ro- 
eovering from an attack of typlnud 


Mitsubichi t'ompany, with an annual 
years, as occa.sion ri'quired, and have income of in gold, paying a 

tax of $ 021 , 000 . 

The second rlcho.st is Baron Mitsui, 


Recipes For This Week 

(Tly Hetty Ilarclay) 


llOl.iD.W S.AI.ADS 
.\pple and Or:mge Salad 
Fool and slice oranges, rejecting all 


fever, and was in a very weak condi- bond of the Mit.sui Fompany. with an while membrane, (’ut wedg.'.shaned 


ing. The specimen tools whi di are in 
his collection prove HiIh, he «ays. The 
tools that he found while he was en¬ 
gaged in excavating indicate that 
man was very industrious In Ihc gla¬ 
cial age. 

Dr. Ami for the past three months 
haa been W’orking in the M-malictian 
deposits near Bordeaux, under spe¬ 
cial concession by the French Gov¬ 
ernment. The collection which he ol)- 
tained is said to he the finest ever 


at .najoi ity tion. took the pills, and Uirough them income of $l.CfO.tlOO and tax of $105,- slices from red apples, without jkt- out by Uie excavators, 

r otggc.^ted stiongdh. My ing. Arr.ango on lenuce-covcrcd salad 'Vkeii the gigantic task of clo.isifyr 

and^waa fVrce\? *io*^”u.scontin ?o Dchcst men In Jap in in- plates, using alternale slie's of vuiious implements is c'un- 


(;ommonting on the above omeiul waining. one Saskatchewan paper cor- Again Dr. Williams’ Fmk FllLs were elude the two Iwasagts, seven Mit- orange and apple. 


i.rtly .‘Eiys that it i.s u.sually when parent.*? do not know' what Uie lenrtior is resorted to and she was soon restored 

doing and the teacher doe.? not know what the parents are doing that mch excellent health. Then my ddest 

<1( plorable accidents as did h *ppen in the recent storm occur. performed for 

‘ In severe coM weather the immbi'r of tragedies from fire aUo largely cned condition. Once more Dr. Wil- 

ru;easc, Itoaring tires are built before the family retires for the nighb or lianis' Fink Ihils were tried, and he 

lieiore leaving the house for an evening in order that it nmv be warm on soon in excellent health. So I 

their return. Fires occur all too frequently w’ilh calamitous re.sults. Some- that more than satis- 

, . ‘ faction ban been obtained bv the use 

times the stove is iheckecl too tightly and while the family sleeps tU- house of this medicine. The pills 4ve done Maiquis Hosokaw-a, with .S2Si»,00n: 

fills w’ifh gas. ^ more good in my* home than hmeh-edu the woaUhiost employee is Dr. Dau. 

All of which only serves to emphasize the need of taking cvcr.v i»os.»;iI)le dollars w'orth of more expensive 

I'locaution while coping w'lth the problems wlUch severe cold weather 1 inps 
I T a few’ weeks during the height of the Canadian winter. 


Mitsui, with 


Urges Viiits To Dominion 


Expert Will Conduct Research 


Mii( It 


To l»c At First 


'Tested (111 


liaiul ( aticcr Iheory May He 
S.i\s ITe.'iilcr ilaldwiii I Ish* <)| Man 

Frernicr Faltlwin paid a high trib-| As soon a.s the sanction of tlie ^!in- 
r.c t(* the ♦•ducativo ami :.n*fyiiig in- istry of Health i.s obtained, the Isle of 
iluonco r.f ihc Ihnpirc Farli.irui udiry Man will iH'como the centre of ;i con- 
ciatinn at the fourteen'h annual; centrated cancer rc.soarch to be c.'ir- 
nus ting of the I.biittd Ivingdom ried out by Dr. Louis Saaibon. < n-- 
i*? auch of the Rs.-o( iatit n i.i 1 of the world’.s leading cancer experts, 

r.iinster Hall. j He plans to make a minute exam- 

He advocalcii iroquent vi.?itr: of the imillon of the llora and fauna of the 
t.iembers of the home bratu ii of the, island and'to leave no stoiu* unUinicd 
association It) the Dominions end of in the hope of finding a cure lor the 
inomlier.'i of tin* branches in the IH)- <liscasc. Dr. Suiubon, who 1.’; working 
minions to Great Ihiiain and t j each under the direction of ih- I'.rilish 
other, and m this tonnecUr)u he re- School of Tropical Medicine, h;..', in¬ 
ferred to his own experienc * in (’.m -1 Umated that he already has a tuoory 
mia last .«ummer. Such visit.s. he said, regarding the origin of cancer and 
ti-nded to n•nu>vc i:ii.su!ider....(n.lin£: - hopes by this means to liu-.l ‘-i|j«»rt 
ami to cry.^lalizc in Hie p»ibli<‘ iniml for his theory. 

lines of delinit. Kmpire policy. ' ^Vith the aid of street nmiM and 

The I’rcmier rcleried tt) ;hc pio- registers he plana to iiiaUe 

posed visit of a delegation from the'a Uiorough clieok-up in all ihe la’and 
I nili-d Kiagdtim branch of the Ivni*; (i;jjtrlctH of inn.sons who oied 
I)ire 1‘arliainciUai y A.ssoeiition 


to 


medicines. ’ “ , managing dhpetor of 

Dr. Williams’ Fink Pills nsslal 

digestion, correct the lassitude, thoi Fi Toki<i and Vokohama T3S per- 
pal])itatiun of the heart, shaky nerves sons report personal incomc.s ex- 
and the pallor of the face and Fpa ceediner <'’5 000 
that are the results of thin, impure* f? • 

blood. I *■ 

You tan get lliese Pills from any! AnolKsr llliicion Dextrovcfl 

medicine dealer, or by nmil at 50, Anoiner Illusion Uestroycci 

cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ ^ . 

Medicine Go . BrocUvillc, Ont. Kn^Ilsli I’rofessar Of ( lieinistry Says 

— - - . , Toast Ih l-'attenhig 

Advisory Weather The hopt.i of women who reek to 

Service For Aviators slim iigmea by eating toast i 

-- instead of bread wore shatttfred by 

Wealht'r Itiilletiii IMaii I iider l{; vlt w Frofe.x.sor It. H. A. Flimmer, Profes- 
\t Met i'orological Head- , sor of Chemistry In the University of 

tpiarters London, when he lectured on "Com- 

A Kchemc for the dcvclojan' nt of mon Krror.s in Diet’’ at the New 
an advisory wcalhcr servit e for avia- Health Society's meeting .at St. 
tors is now being worked out at the Thomas’s Hospital Modi> al School, 
Dominion nictcoruloglcal heodq lar- H. 

tens. j "Toast,’’ he said, "is worse than 

The jirojcct will, it Is cxpi cted, bread for fattening. The more fact 
eventually result in a >|u*t'.voik of that wo see steam arising from the 
specially equipped observalorhM from bread when it is being toasted should 
Newfoundland to liritish '’oluinbia prove to us tliat the resultant toast 
being instituted. The scheme ir Im?- Is only concentrated bread. People 
lag designed primarily for air nmil are apt to cat two slices of bread in 
service by way of the Gulf of St. the crisper, more conoeiitralcd form, 
from Lawiencc and to guide the 1-100 gl- ami so are wor.se off from thetr pcbil 


plcted, Dr. Ami bellevc.s he will bo 

suis and Baron Obura, who comes, (inipofriiil Sahul able to piece together a tomplete 

last with an Income of $517,000 eniF Feel oranges and giapefriiit and ■tory dealing with Iho ovoluUon^of 
tax of $1 IP,000. divide into sogmont.s, rejecUng all ^n^plvnicnts used by man for thou- 

Tlie wealthiest company prc.sldcnt white skin. Arrange a circle of of years, 

is M. llatlori of the Tokio sVatch and orange segments on a lettuce-covered " 

(’lock Gompany, with an income of salad plate and till centre with infantile Mortality 

SIOT.OOO. The weuUhicst peer is the grapefruit .segments. i - 

- ! L:it4>«tt l-'igiH-es Show That .MorV.iHty 

< IH'.AMKD MUSIinOOMS l(;ilo |h DerreaHlng 

Wash >2 pound inuKhroomH. He-! Infaiililo mortality Is dccrcastiig. 


move stem.s, scrape and cut in pieces. Figures for June last, issued recently. 

Melt 5 tablespoons of butter, mid Kive an infant mortality rate of 77.2 

mu.shrooins, cook 2 ininuto.s in cover- ne'e thousand births against (*ne of 

cd di.^h; sprinkle with salt and pep- ^^-5 Tor June, 1926. Qpe1>cc. with an 

per, dredge with flour, and add v* Infant morlallly rate of KHJ.l. had the 

cup cream. Cook .slowly five minuter, highe.st in the Dominion; Manitoba. 

Add a slight grating of nutmeg, j)our "'ith .a rate of 49.0 had tlie lo'A'c.st. 

over idrip.s of buttered and gar- t^ueliec, however .showed tlie great- 

nish with toast points ami painloy. , iinprovoinent duriniH^ the year of 

—all provinces. In June. 1926, the Que- 

•HMvKT WITH GK W'BLIHtV bee rale stood ut 123.8. 

JKU.V t The Dominion birth rale fur Juno 

Make a good, firm cranb.'rry j»*lly. per thousand •jiopulation wa.s 25.1 

fill de.S8ert glasses half full. When against 25.3 in June, 1926. Th* death 

the jelly is firm fill the glas.sos with a rate was 10.16 against 10.9. 

plain junket; when junket is set, put - - 

away to cool. 'This may be served For ( atarrh. !♦ is one of ahe chief 

plain or with wiiippod cream hc.ap-xl of Dr, Thomas 

. , Kiicctiic Oil that it can Ik? used inter- 

OVLT it. and a little iilecc of cianbeny ,„,„y ^ 

jelly on top to udd H touch Of color. outwardly. SuiTorers fn>m tutiuiii 
--will find that the Oil when used nc- 

To Hold Dairy Convention aordiiigly to direut.onH ^^ill Miv 

' , prompt relief. Many siifierers fiorn 

ihc conventiou of the \\et;t(*rn Fan- this nilment iiave found red'of in tho 
ada iiairy .\.?8oclation, to be held in Oil ami haw sent testimonials. 

Hcgina Ft bruary 7 to 10 inclurhc, \n111i ^ -- 

bo addres^fd by many of tin? most im-! A (drl'H KsKuy On lto,\s 

portant dairy auihoriiles iu tin* Do-l Boys are men that I'livc not got Ui. 
ininlou. ItcHidt'S tlu? r»‘piVK«*niail.'e« big as their papas, and girls are wo- 


. cancer In the last fifty years mid all' gantic dirigible from KnglumJ, v.iiich of view than if they only had one* slice lathuis many men that will be ladies by-and by. 


< ana la m.A Septt nbci. iw- L..pios- cancer vicUins now living. is scheduled to terminate a tr.m.?-At- of ordinary hi cad. 

ted the hope that the speaker oi the; -jf ^ly previou.H experioucc count.s lantic i raise at Montreal next • um-' _ 

House ot Gomm.ui-; \v,mld hoiui that for anytlih^* ‘ he said. "I will dia-mer. 

lK>dy whic h he ; aid, 6101191 Ih* tho-; cover that cancer cluster.; in wclNie- _ __ 

ruushly ...,.u..-...alnUvn of all pa.ties; nn,a a.v.« wiuTe the pcpIn livin^> wonn.s. hnaaver hnna vated rr, 
ami should be cojiq,osed of lu.'ii who iu,.rc are liable to be attackoMl. found in tho digt..stive Iri.i.s, where 

did not regard tliese i>eriod' al collcague.s and I will then con* set up distuibance.s detriiiimfal 

oyerBcas as .simply ])le.t.surc j-.tmtj. ' duct a minute c.xaiuination of the \er-#^® health of iJm < hibl. There can 

“ null in each district, o.^pecially rets, . - . w i**. i uniii 

Kaillo Itroadeasiiiig mice, cockroaches, cellar heetlc-s end 

1 >f the total radio broadi asling sla- yf^rlous kinds of worms. We have al- 

'C 

HUpp 


Hast* III lUliy reproseiuaflves an- 
iH-etral lo be present. 


f \‘ 


Resignation Closes Office ; — 


iiibtory Of .MondyvUle I'ost Otlice 
Started and I'iiiUhed Wiili One 
Man 

The history of the Moodyville, Kan- 


TAplaliiliig the Troiildf 
A man purcha.scd a cheap car and. 


Man was made before woin.an. When 
Ciod looked ut Adam Ik* said to Him¬ 
self: "Well. I think I can do heller if 
1 try again." .\ml lie made Kvc. God 
liked Kvc HO much better than Adam 


.niiiun III v.uiiun. >>c navc ur 

tiDii.H in the w.oid amotiiuiiig to 1.116, r^ady iMlablishcd a Iheot'^ii. ui.d w( 
Gena.Ia has 57. takhig Hecm.! ])l:u e to: to how it is suppo.-ted.’ 


r .lers navo been ox- jMjstoIlicc hegiiw and end.? witli 
ex'eiient nren’i'*aLiini f/ir ... 

L* can l>e hn l la ALItcr’s . tenure oi K. M. Moody ii.s posl- 


Iho hurtful intrnders 
polled. An ex'i 
this purpose 

W'orm Fuwdcis. They will Inimc t ate- ♦ 

ly destroy the worms ui d vx}rr-H * the After serving in that eaiiacily lor 

th.. rnltv.l .St.'.., vhi.h hat. hi.-., a,.-| I..u.is Sambon, an uulhad'y on [h"u‘uxislcnl^^ rorly-oiuhl ycarw In thiH I-<,llav..at- 

cortliiig to th.! I iiile.l State.i Depait- tropical dhseasos. wlio almost 20 yeara ' -- ■ County village, whicii he fouiul- 

luent of Gtmimeix e. Followi!ig ev UiCi'ujro reported the cau.ses i>f iiclagra' Muskiut ed. Mtxjdy, now eighty-eight years, 

Cuba. 17: Uu. sin. H; ,Sw'.-dur.. 30; investigated Uic cau.se of H is stated that eastern capilalials old. has resigned to conseivo hia cye- 

Australia and Geimany each, 21; Ar-; malaria when he lived in the inos- *«nmht 980 acres of land and *Tor Uie enjoymeut of oM age." 

pontina. 22: lYuteil Kingdom. 20; and ; quito-inle.stcd Koiniui Caniiiagna, ha.s f^wamp at Dak 1-ako, Man., for the posUnaster of the 

Fram e and Spain ea* ii m. ! in recent years devoted his ati ntioii pvirp^jse of a niiiKkrat farm. While the Fmn and now that he Is retiring Ihe 


.Nearly I.Omo.immi < uble le 4 i 
wen* rulod from ilii.-tsla to 
lids j» ar. 


to cancer. 


of logs: 
Kritoniu! 


I . 


Considered I iidiguUP'd 
ulkey hA.s abolished one inoi c ci s- 
Itewar.* of the man who r.jMiluglze.s! the ancient |)u.st by forbidding 

when he doi s you u favor. | turbuiied ecclcKlasUcs from "riding 

. I ■ about towns and cities on donkeys." 

Thu ecclesiusUc in a turban and his 
robes does not look dignified listridc u 


amount of cash involved in the dtal government has decided to Uiscr>n- 
has not been disclosed, it l.i ‘luici tliul thuic the oP** e with his departure 
tho fencing alone will cost $2u.000. from it. 


MUSICAL INSTRUMCNTS 


Fluen M.iii> Sett lei *1 
A lhousan<l men have l)eeii j lr.( ed 
on w'estcra farms this year by the 


Dragged Down By .\Ktlima. ’The 
man or woman who is comln ially 

pubjeet to asthma is limi ted lor Ids Mlnard’s Lliiliiient for Neuralgia, 
or her life’s work. Streiig'h ileparla 


finding it was not quite up k) tjicei- that there have been more wonitn 

fiention, took it hack to the w'orkd for than men. J?oys arc a trou’olo. They 

examination. wear out everything but loap. If I 

"What i.s wrong wltli it" lie v.a.i had iny way half the world would bo 
a.skod. girls and the rest dolls. My pupa is 

"Well, you HOC,’’ explained the own- *hce that J think he must havo 
cr, "every part if it makes a noise heeii a little girl when lie was a boy. 

except the horn." —*- 

_ tTnlcss worm.s be expell.-d from tho 

, ..... system, no child can be healthy. 

Western Hay I rodiicliofi Mother Graves’ Worm Kxtcrrninator 

West(?rn (’ai.uda has produ .d a is an exzclleiit modicin'.* to-destroy 
record hay crop this year, according worms. 

’ to iireliminary estimates of the P'cU- 
cral Goverimunt. The four WV.slern 
IToviiKCH produced 2,514,000 tons of 
hay and (lover in comparison with 
1.9S1.000 U)ns in 1920 and 235,700 
loirs of^ alfalfa os against 223,000 
tons. 




TUo fiiHl rubber pavement Id llio 
Fnited States has just b«‘en laid eii a 
ralliuiul ei JSKlng In Hacliie, W'Ifcou 
sin. 


Machines have been Indented which 
I will solve problcma in algebra. 


II 


Ti.rUAFJloMG GHAMOFIIONK. 


38 Kelectloiis, |1G5.00 for $55.00 


Gu.'ii aiiU-ed. 
Iloynl Fast 


i’oisKoii, 

Montreal 


340 Mount* 


TMA NSW KRVNOH RKMCOV. N 0 .I 

I.VTHERAPIONS ; 

Ha*f tmr Catarrh. Mo. 9 for Blood A 

Bkln litaaaaaa. No.tforCbronlo WaalinaaMd 
f '‘'d br laa'iirii < hkm.n i. or raiuia laall froaa 
t)« !.*CLI»Cllf4 Ca ilataratovbAd.NW.I.J oo4a« 


W X V. 1713 


donkey, the adniJnisrution holds. The 
prii'sts also are restrained from plaj’- 
Ing cards in coffee houses fioiii ra^w 
on. 


Hudsons Bay Company over^ieOH set- and energy ih taken away until file SuHkalcheuaiTs Aruhie l.uiid 
I llement Ix^ard, according to l*’. h. becomes a tircary oxlrtcnoc. And jeti xhc arable land area of H-sk itch 
Gamble, of Wiiiniiicg. inanac-r of *** needless. Dr. J. 1). Kclbigg'a 

, that organization. 


No man is so pour 
nothing but money. 


as he who has 


Mistress: "Gan you prepare i.ny 
foreign dlshca, Bridget?" 

New Gook: "Sure I can tnu:n — 
French beans, Spanish onions, and 
Cilrish i»olaloes'’’ 


CONSTIPATION DtAFNCftO 
ANTHNITIt KIDNEY DISEASES 

•nS Mdfiy Othdr Chr*n(« DImam* 
Nav# D«#A fljr N*lur»l MdthdSd 

CUTBrf lS*»uldrM.O.»lnAM«ntfanc« 

TILOBM NKALTH tCMOOL 
*411 •r.ianivn »cn«ii loia 

Or. Arthur Va«,A.B.,M.D.,fr«». ’ 

_WrtU tf WmtM UUraiurd 


COYOTES 

DADGtR —WHITE WEASEL-SKUNK 
iiiid i«tltr-r fill')! iii-cttcd; ( waut 

Itir rtu’ly iiiHiuifacuiru 

S.OOO CoyotCk 10.000 Weaset 

1.000 Q^dttcr 


A«thma llemcdy ha.. hroMsUt a “* •*' aces ana 

change to an army of sutferers. It re- Bic area under cultivation in 1920 at 
iteves the restricted air tubes ana 26,264,610 or less than half the total. 

euarcU agalMl future liouhle. 'Try it.-The area under wlieat la tn« same ,,ooo n^dser 1,000 Skunk 

year w'as 13,106,457 acres or approxl- (jtii-'hi Ht lu umhk- .^art** 

Hlut.ber 1.4 now believed to be Ibe ,.u,uv„uo„ r- """ l ur innny y.-ura ,.an, 

equiinncnl Umt enables v.Ual.i8 to suakateliewun conulotently actoimta 
witUatand the prcBsuro uf Kreut ^alf of the (.•anmU.in v, hciit 

depths. leUtc observations record 

GrecnlHiid specimens that took 70U lo | « . . ^ 

8UU fiittioniH of line straight down. 


I Keep Miaard'H IJiiliueiit In the limiH 49 . 


.\FHUi'<‘d. |■’lir iiinity >«‘ur 3 priHi I 
liavf riitijfi'>l UiiMir'nu'th of (.'nnudiau 
xiol I 4 'Uii yu'.i: ut-iid lao t- 

• •Hill today tf»r I’rlr.* Gi.r, Kiili'uliuf 
Tne*. llu'iki'Ph Ut'fiirfiu'*'. miti SPECIAL 
Cl FER W FIRST SHIPPER truiu i-ucti 
lu< ulity. 

J. H. MUNRO 

Reveldtoke. B.C.. nnU eii Fh'ct Vve. Woht, 
Caig.'iry. 



















Canadian Goes To Colombia 


40 jjviaence lo ono^ 

XKe Betting Habit ] 
Any Headway 


riir© Bred ('aHIo To Be Sent To 
Southern ('lime 

Fred Stock of Tavistock, Ontario, 
graduate of the Ontario Agricultural 
College. Guelph, has been appointed 
livestock commissioner for the Re¬ 
public of Colombia. South America, 1 
according to a recent announcement j 
made in Toronto by Dr. Santiago' 
At)adia. son of the President of Col-1 
otnhia. 

Dr. Abadla. who was a visitor tol 
the Royal Winter Fair and l-s a form-i 
er student nt the Ontario Agrlcul-, 
tural College. Guelph, has been given' 
authority by the Government of his; 
country lo assist In thtf^ rc-orgaiilza- 
llon of the agricultural Industry of 
Colombia. He is now in Canada in the 
interests of this task. 

Some pure bred herds of cattle' 
have been bought in Ontario by Dr. 
Abadia and .shipped to the new ex- 
l)erimental farm nt Hagota. capital 
of Colombia. The Colombia Govorn- 
ment. according to Dr. Abadia. has 
an nnibltioua program to improve the 
.status of agriculiure in that country 
and plan.s to .‘•■pend during the pres- 
Kent ilRcal year, $1,500,000 towards 
that end. 

Dr. Abadia has associated with him 
on his prc.scnt trip through Canada 
and In hi.s work in the .south, another 
young Canadian agriculturist, Ken¬ 
neth McArthur, formerly of Lendon, 
Ontario, now' proprietor of a large 
larin adjacent to Bagola. Mr. Mc¬ 
Arthur is also a graduate of Guelph 
and is associated W'ith Washington 
liernal. a young Colombian graduate 
of Guelph, in his farm operations in 
South America. Mr. McArthur and 
I Mr. Stock arc lending the benefit of 
, their advice to Dr. Abadia in the pur- 
I cliase •( livestock in Canada. 


' *ne rinanclal Times, I.^uidon. hn.s 
undcrtalccn lo publish a Canadian 
■ supplement every iilx months for the 
i next three years. Tlic slgnlficunce of 
I this Is notable, It mcan.i Ihut Ihlt: nu- 
lii ihe ‘horllativo journal secs a period of 
[‘'or j great and rapid progress ahead for 
, the Dominion calling for )>eri(Hlical 
survey I reviews of conditions in addillon to 
oar, anrt'tJ'e information printed in Iti^egular 
. ITamil-^ editions. A stalT of travelling corres- 
agricul -1 pondents Ih kept in the country, und it 
:en sam-; c^naiiters maikot movements Iraport- 
5 graded nnl enough lo warrant the o.Kpcn3c of 
nd three I cable toll.s on quotations und special 
taniiued,; news. 

r No. 2. ( The first nupplement has nmde its 
t and 68 j appearance, and consists of forty 
lie low’er ^ pnges, well Illustrated and printed on 
y of cos- book paper. Its contents inclndo a 
cause cf foreword by Hon. James Malcolm, and 
Is. jHrliclos on agricultural prosperity, 

.1 branch banking, nrltlsh trade, railways. n»ln- 
tUfferenl orals, industries, insurnnce, Invest- 
‘vy r.scd inents, sliipping, water power, the 
make of; Provinces, and opporfimitles for In- 
Iffer (nco ventmont. 

Inlion ef In his Introductory article Mr. R. J. 
niunhig Harrctt, managing editor, otates that 
fnnadu'ii expansion in the past two 
lid, "that, decadea has been prodigloiia, smr- 
wan arc p-'issing that of any equivalent period 
0 re* uUs, of the ninotconth century in the Unit- 
icliiucry, cd Slato.s. He views the future no 
the pio- favorably that he bclicve .1 ho is doing 
1 . or pos- an Imperial service In kc»,*p!ng tlie 
0 untlcT- Old Country Informed accurately ns 
Is of op- to events. An to this thctc wan bo no 
to ho a qucntlons. It is a service to C’anula n.s 
It in the ' well, and one which w'lU be nppreciat- 
ecd T’ur- ed hero. It will provide a conidstont. 

reliable link between the two ccun- 
trle.s which will mean much tJ both, 
.SatisfAction wMl be the giCHler when 
it is undersloo^l that the editors of 
The Financial Times gamed lliclr In- 
Kpirntion by close first-hand investi¬ 
gation of r.'inada’s i)otentlalltie3. — 
Toronto Globe. 


One of the Canadian crops which 
to Qot Included In the agricultural re¬ 
turns Is the annual crop of tree seeds. 
It may be thought that these are of 
no value except for naturnl reproduc¬ 
tion In the forest lands anJ ns food 
for squirrels and chipmunks. Tliat 
may have once been true but with 
the Increasing need of artificial f(tr-1 
estatlon the w'orld over the demand 
for hardy and dlaoasc-frco varieties 
of tree seeds Is becoming lncrea.slng- 
ly dllTlcult to satisfy. The needs of 
Cana<llan coniferous trees arc stead¬ 
ily making a world reputatiou for 
themnclvos, according lo the Natural 
Reaourecs Intelligence Service of the 
Department of the Interior at Ottawa, 
and are In ns relatively great dcji<nrd 
as Canadian need potatoes, bidb.i und 
cereals, on account of their superior 
sturdiness and reproductive qualitlc.”:. 
as compared with those grown In 
milder climates. 

In this connection it may be inter¬ 
esting to note that nlremly the In¬ 
dustry is heconiing organized under 
the nuspices of the Korcatry 5?orvico 

of the Federal Government. Wfiiat Is 

» 

said to l>o the largest tree-seed plant 
in e.'dstenco Is located In Hritijh-Col- 
umbia nt New VV'estminster, va nuich 
as 3 tons of Douglas Kir seed, 6’* 
tons of yellow i)iuo reed, 2 ti ns of 
spruce seed, ton of western hem¬ 
lock seed and U ton of cedar need 
having been harvested and graded In 
a single season. These needs arc cup- 
pliod at cost lo rcspon.siblc nulhorlilcs 
within the Hrltlsh Kmpfre. 

Although Canadian Irco seeds are 
being Hucce.xsfully planted all over the 
world incliid'ng extensive areas in 
the Motherland itself, it must not be 
forgotten that C'anada as one of Ibc 
greatest of manufacturing countries 
with respect to wool pro<iucls is ac¬ 
tively beginning lo take an Ir.lererA 
in replacing her forests. The province 
of Que'oee alone has an olfioial pro¬ 
gramme for l92fi, which will involve 
the planting of no fewer than 3,000,- 
000 trees. Ontario ha.s al.iO medo 
great strides in the creation of new 
and permanent forest arcus. It Is sin¬ 
cerely to be hoped that the leader¬ 
ship of the federal and'certain of the 
provinrial governments in this res¬ 
pect will receive every i>oasiblo meas¬ 
ure of public support. 


Some Unprofitable 


Tlic Federal Department of Agri¬ 
culture, which has official supervision 
of belting on all race tracks In the 
Dominion, has completed and Issued a 
statistical statement from which It 
appears that the money wagered on 
('anadian race tracks during the sea¬ 
son just closed amounted to $17,913,- 
828, as compared with $14,1)16,672 
wagered lost year. There were, in 
1927, thirty-four more racing days 
than In 1926, and $3,569,150 in added 
wagers among.st a population which 
would increase in proportion to the 
nation's natural growth may r.ot be 
taken as evidence of a spread of the 
betting habit among.st the people. 
Gambling is inherent in the human 
race, and the propensities are prob¬ 
ably inherited more than they arc ac¬ 
quired. Whoever is anxious for their 
eliminations should find a crumb ol 
comfort in the fact that the disposi¬ 
tions do not today lead men into the 
extravagance of former days. The 
world la getting better gradually, 
though appearances may sometimes 
raise a note of Interrogation in this 
respect. At all events, gambling, 
through legislative control, and surely 
through the elevation of moral stand- 
ard.s as well, has lost much of its old 
reprchen.siblc character. Time was 
when men of quality made belting 
their most serious occupation. The 
custom of "pitting" or backing tno 
man to outlive another became so 
prevalent in Britain that in 1774 a 
Gambling Act was paa.sed by Parlia¬ 
ment prohibiting insurance except 
when there was an insurable interest. 
The preamble of this act is to the ef¬ 
fect that, "whereas it hath been found 
by experience that the making of in¬ 
surance on lives and other events 
wherein the assured shall have no In¬ 
terest, hath Introduced a mischiev¬ 
ous kind of gambling, it is necessary 
to draw a distinction between a con- 
■ tract of life insurance and a w'ager." 
The common passion for gambling 
was such that people would lay weg- 
ers on every thing under the sun. 

' More than one "cause celebra" had 
origin In "the golden age of wager¬ 
ing." One famous law suit arose ou' 


Ideas Under Patent 


Hp«*rfa<les For Hens and frmf»rrlla 
With "Ppriaro|»e*’ Only 
Two Of Many 

Some inventive genius recently pa¬ 
tented-an instrument for opening a 
lock when the key has been mislaid. 
Such a convenience might prove loo 
{K>pular among the burgling gentry 
to result In any wide-spread demand 
among ordinary bou-seholders who 
use such locks. Evidently, however, 
this drawback never occurred to the 
Inventor, and so w'c have another ad¬ 
dition lo the many futile contrivances 
that have been patented at one time 
or another, says Everybody’s Week¬ 
ly. Ixmdon. 

There was, for instance, the inge- 
ntoua cigarette holder that mechan¬ 
ically ejected its own "fag ends." 
This, too, w’ns soon found lo be use¬ 
less because of the nasty habit It 
had of shooting them at the unfor¬ 
tunate person who happened to be 
nearest the smoker. 

ICriually puerile was the pocket wal¬ 
let In W'hich was secreted a levolvcr 
that went off when handed to a high¬ 
wayman. It worked all right until 
It nearly cost the life of the experi¬ 
menting inventor’s wife. 

An umbrella was patented some 
time ago which had a liolc in the roof 
covered by a cowl to keep out the 
^ rain. Its inventor explained that 11 
, enabled the user to sec where he was 
going in a heavy rain storm and thus 
' avoided running into people 


The Rachhone Of TraJc 


Need¬ 
less to say, fils contrivance did not 
make him a mllllonairt. 

Another white elephant In the in 
venting line was a suit for wolf bunt¬ 
ing. It weighed twenly-Uirec pounds 
and contained 1,200 nails protruding 
from it at half inch intervals. 

Some one who thought golf loo dif¬ 
ficult patented a freak ball that could 
be driven 600 yards and actually 
seemed peeved when the St. Andrew’s 
authorities turned It down. 

Another elaborately conceived in- 
Istrument was one for anchorlncr a 


Jake—"I hear your ■wifo la sick, 
DniiRcrous, eh?" 

Sam—"No, she’s too weak to be dan 
porous." 


“New'spaper advertising brings the 
buyer to the store," he said. "The ex¬ 
perienced advertiser will use the v.'in- 
dow's add billboards to augment his 
newspaper space, but the newspaper 
goes to the home and should be used 
by every advertiser. 


Dicky: My dad is an Elk, a Lion, a 
Moose and an Eagle. 

Micky: What docs It cost to see 
him? 


Character writes itself on a man’s 
face with Indelible Ink. 


Inspect Turkey Flocks 


Take Steps To Raise Status Of 
Saskatchewan Turkeyj 

Inspection of turkey flocks in Sas- 
katChowan for the selection of cliolce 
brofding stock has been completed by 
fix field lopreRenlatives of the co- 
opoialion and markets branch of the 
provincial department of ugricuitun-. 
Several hundred bird.s w»*re iuBp^ rtetl 
and about TiOO liandid '<3 apiiroV’ d 
bir'!.s. 

A card index system has been in¬ 
augurated and ouch owner’s approvcfl 
birds uru listed and ns sales are made 
a new card is mad>’ out for tUo uew 
owner of approved birds. 

At the request of W. A. llrowu, 
clilef ol the fodend pjiiltry division, 
copies of the list of Sa.skatchow*iin rp 
proved turkeys have bee.n sent lo fed¬ 
eral poultry piomoters in Ontario, 
ijuobce, Pilnc«* Edward Island, New 
ItruiibwicU, Noia Scutlu, Manitoba and 
Alberta. 

"Not only is this A\orl: going to 
raise tiie status (f the Saskatc'n wan 
turkey for marketing purposo:^," salil 
W. Waldron, markets coniimssioner. 
"but it is an Intportant step lowaids 
buiul'.ng up a Muy subRlaniiitl buriness 
in iho sale of cliolce bre.-ding stock " 

Flocks wen* Inspedtnl at Ueitiim. 
Jlavldhqn. Penztinco, Imperial, Rich 
ardsou. /mlatulla. Laura, Saskatoon, 
Calvet, Clark’s Crossing. Woodrorw, 
Limerick. Amulet, Yeomans, Vimount. 
Govan, Maple Creek. WspaBhoo, Pia- 
pot, lilrch ILlIs, CrtMlmaii, Kroudo. 
Watson, Killmore. and Tuxford 


Not Affected By Exports 


Milch Cows In ('uaiida liiereased Hy 
55,000 In Year 

There w'cro 55,000 more milch row’s 
and 54,000 more other catrlo on 
Canadian farms when a survey wns 
made in June of this year than there 
were in the previous June, according 
to the bureau of statistics. Move¬ 
ments are going on steadily to the 
States, but the figures show that 
breeding is keeping fully apace. 

Lu;^t June there were 3 891.311 
milch cows, compared with 3S31191 
a year before, while there wore 5.27 7,- 
927 other cattle compared with 4,- 
731.CSS in June. 1926. Horses ircrcus- 
ed by 23,000, sheep by 120,000, and 
sw'inc by 340,000. 

The main decrease in milch cattle 
w’os in Saskatchewan and Alberta. 
The former declined by 30.000 bead 
of milk yearlings, but increa.sing 21.- 
000 in milch cows, while Alberta lind 
26.0t'0 fewer cow's and 4-i,00tT‘ nnlk 
yearlings. Ranch cattle, however, in* 
crca.sed 158,000 in Alberta. 


Woman 'rruiiivd llandN and Kiirn As 
Substitute For Lyes 

When Mr.s. ('lara Raney, telephone 
operator at Melrose, Ohio, wins 23 
years old, she found hcri.elf becoming 
blind. Doctors were unable to aid her, 
but she determined that she would 
not give up her p )sition. 

So she tnilned her hands r.nd ears 
to take the place of her eyes, and now 
at 02. she still is holding the job and 
hasn’t had a vntation in 20 yenis. 
Hells have boon substituted for the 
lights on the ordinary sw'ltchboard 
and she never makes a mistake In 
plugging in a connection. She is on 
duty from 5 in the morning to 12 at 
night. 

"I haven’t any idea when I 1! ejuit." 
Mr.’. Raney says. "I uUKht lo be 
good for several years yet.’ 


A Clii<; Frock 

The youthful frock shown here is 
one of the newest and am irtest styles 
this season, and wifi be found suitable 
lor runny occasions. 'J'ha brdice is cut 
in Heel oris, und each side of the front 
is slightly gathered and tlie scalloped 
low'er edge is Joined to the two-piece 
flared skirt. The convciTilde collar 
may he worn open, or fastened at the 
neck, and the long dart-fPted eleeves 
are finished w*Uh band cuffs. No. 1690 
is In sizes 16. 18 and 2i) years. Size 
18 (36 bust) requires 3 yards 31)-inch, 
or 2T-3 yards 54-inch material. Price 
20 cents the pattern. 

Our Fashion Book, lllustraling the 
new'esc and most practical styles, will 
be of Interest lo every home dress¬ 
maker. Price of the book 10 cents 
the copy. 


Alberta Sheep Industry 
Another shipment of 442 lamJiH 
went out of Cardston recently, upon 
which an average of $10 per head was 
realized by the farmers. Several ship¬ 
ments of breeding ewes have been 
shipped into the district recently rnd 
one carload of pure nambouillctt 
rams. The sheep industry seem.s to 
be getting a good foothold In Ibc 
mixed farming practice of this dis¬ 
trict. 


A Reiil Mo\ie Fan 
The champion movie fan of the 
w'orld is probably an S5-yeur-(»ld wo¬ 
of Cherokee, Indiana. She has 


Got His Price 

A Swiss farmiT lat»*ly an 

offer from two tillu-r mim lor (Uii of 
lils roWH. Tlio farim*r asJu u a luin- (»f 
l.LTiO fruncH, hiu iho buyer-^- not 

willing to give more than I 2‘‘0. 
Whereuiioii llu‘ proprlMor of the ci.w 
ngii'vd to at‘c»i»i iluir tciins, on the 
consldernlion tluti each of ids chiMren 
Rhoiild b(‘ glvtui five francs. 


The lourlh of the live lO.UoO ton 
cargo ulcunicrs under contsmc'ilon in 
the Old Country for the Atlantic str- 
vice of the Canadian Pacific was 
launched recently from the yards of 
Mosara. Barclay, Curie and Co., Glas¬ 
gow'. With appropriate rer-iiaonies 
and in the presence of u largo gath¬ 
ering of Canadian Pacific officials, 
the new ship was christened the 
"BeaverhlH" by Miss Mavis OilUos. 
(inset) daughter of Cup’ain James 
Gillies, general manager of the Cana¬ 
dian Pacific Hteamships Ltd. 

When tlie.sc new steamers /ire de¬ 
livered, the Canadian Pac'fic cargo 
fleet will be augmented by five of the 
highest type of esepresR cargo steam¬ 
ers and capable of iruilnitiming a 
speed of M knots an hour, which is 


regarded as exceptional for cargo 
steamers. The marked growih 
ocean trade between Groat liritain 
and Canada via the St. La'vrcnoe 
loute, has prompted Uie Canadian Pa¬ 
cific to augment their freight service 
to this e.xtent. These vessels will be 
used lo maintain a weekly scivice 
between Canadlun I'orts and those in 
Grout Britain and on the Continent. 

Tlic new freighter, like her sister 
ships Iho lleaverburii, Beavordale, 
BoaverforU and Heuverbrao, is 520 
feet in length, 61 and a Iialf feet in 
width with a doadw'eight carrying ca¬ 
pacity of approximately iO.ljOO tons, 
and load draft of 27 feet; but rhould 
a need arise as much us 13.000 tons 
may be carried on the maximii.ni loud 
draft. The ships will be driven by twin 
screw. 


of man 

not missed attending a picture show 
one night in eight years. Simdays in¬ 
cluded. Since 1019 she has seen 2,290 
pictures. No night Is too cold or 
stormy lo keep her from the theatre. 


Tlio Ho.-? 8 ' -‘'\\ lull’s 
>oiir expense account 
liensc, $4’?" 

Traveilliig SHlesnian 
uinbi'ella 1 bought." 


Huw To Order Patterns 


More nu n ar»’ iu»w W'orkliu; on j»t‘W 
buildings in Now /i aland (bun aru t uu 
ployed in any other iiuhistiy. 


She (Iruhgnaiilly) 
you kiss mo again!' 

Ho—“All right, 
open (his time." 


Address—W Innlpeg Nowspap<T Unloa 
175 McUeiiaot Avo., Uiuniprg 


Tiinl W’UB cii 


Patlera No 


Did yer 'usbund get the job 'e wenl 


'I'lio only nodceahlo tiling i.li >ut 
some men is that they are unworthy 
of notice. 


8 uo — "So jou’vo just graduated 
from cooking bcIio(» 1 ?’' 

Flo—"Yes, I'm a Boclor of Db/lally 
Fudge." 


AKsesament value of White Ilnu.ss 
W’ashliigton. Is placed at $22.0U0,o06 
but is exempt from taxuUou. 


Nanio 


Hope is tlie froth on a man's imag 
inutiou- 








A Most Dangerous 
Practice 


Rin Flon Power Site 


lANlTAUV J 


\ Ih liiirtuvl I '^ir tUisI 

Thai riirp«w»* 

To foil the tlevlls which .liipmcsc, 
«ca*fnrlng men wore ronvinri‘4 innpl 
hnvo brought bnd hick to the ill-fntod 
fishing Biimck, Uyo Yol Mani. which I 
(Irlflcil on the broad rarlllc 11 monthfl 
while her crew of 12 .InpancBO fiiher- j 
men Hlckrned, starved and died, the , 
vessel has horn consigned to the 
flames. i 

The Hyo Ycl. which wiui valued at 
about $17.IHMI, was secretly towed to 
an Isoh^sil beach on ruget rMnind, 
her hold lllled with w’a.ite and soaked 
with oil, set afire and ivduced to a 
mass of smouldering ashes and twist¬ 
ed metal. 

It had been )>lanned to ship the 
Ryo Vei hack to .lapnn and arrange¬ 
ments were made to place the 85-f'>ot 
Ixmt on the alter deck of an Anicri- 
ran mail liner for the return voyage, 
hut the plans wore cancelled when It 
was learned the families of the unfor¬ 
tunate flshcimrn did not want her lo- 
turned. 

I The tisher folk of Misaki. Jnprii, 
j where the shii^was hullt, wciv con- 
|vinre<i evil spirits had taken iK'snes- 
j «ion of the ship and her return to 
dupan migh bring other cal i»nillos. 
No part of the ill-fated vcsjiel was 
saved lest a demon escape the fire. 

The Ycl was sighted off the Wash¬ 
ington coast last October .11. J^he had 
set sail on a fishing trip from Jn]ain 
December r*. 1020. The last survivors 
j of the crew died in May, 11127, a diary 
! found on lioanl the vci-.^el reveal'd. 


May Ch.^^nge Site From Wluta Mud 
Falls To Island ^alls 

Intlmatioiu from the WhHmy* ‘d 
S'cw York, have he«*n ree<‘lvcd r.l the 
capital Indicatiiu; that n chunv' In the 
powi 1 site of th«‘ riln rimi ml’.*' i»m> 
be made from While Mud I'alls U) b 
laud Kails. 

Island Kails are <»n the rhuvehlll 
lllvcr, oonsiderahly closer to ihe ndn 
ItiR properly than arc the While Mud 
Kails, on the Nelson, and. It Is under¬ 
stood. tin* Whl(ne\8 and (he Sherrltt- 
tioidon Interests, after goiim into both 
propositions carefully, are Inclined to 
llu* view that the former would bo the 
best pt»wcr site for th»*lr develop 
incut. 

The unrertnlnty of the flnauclei s did 
not occasion any surprise at ilttawa, 
as It wa'< known that the White Mud 
KalU %Nere never detlnlldy dccl'led up 
on. iukI. aft* r the gov»'nmi''nt nnub- It 
ch ar that sertalu restrictions %\ould 
he lmpo.*«rd .1! tin* White Mud >Nere 
develop* d, ihe valu*' of this she to the 
mine o\vm‘rs was distinctly lessened. 

Island Kalis has a t apai Uy of 
luirscpo\v»r. >\hlch would look aftti 
the minitiR d« v*dopnn*nt. Whil»* .Mini 
>Nou1d supply more than 2.*ai.iM)0 
l^o^sepo^^ cr. and tin re would b*' a 
large surplus to he sold l lse^^hel•e. 
Originally .It is said, tin* Whitney * n 
gliU't rs ^^^'r^• «»f the opinion that tin re 
would be no rut***c«»ntrol. and that tin 
\Vhlt«* Mini offert'd spb ndid epoituul 
ties as a prollt pro<lucer. With eontrol 
of p*>\M‘r runs. howev^T. Its ndvjiv, 
tages wen* very mueh dlinlnl.sln*ds and 
conseuin'iitly then* has been a iUspi*sl- 
tion to turn hack to the llrst sit*. 

U is understood that (In* lineiku* d** 
partnn*nt has asked the Whltin-ys to 
come to a decision as 'pdckly as pos¬ 
sible. 


.lOIIN THK UAFTIMr AMI .IKSI S 


.Some IVsHlnilsts Persist In TnMili!*; 

Alxuii Ne\t War 

The talk about an Inevltnblp tbiio 
pcan war goes on. A French jiuMI-.’ 
man says Umt the showdown will 
come in 1035. He makes the inlei- 
osllng suggestion that In nnotboe 'Sar 
In Kurope, the United States will no* 
be on the same side ns Great iPdlriin, 
tlio inference being that naval c;uu- 
petition ha.s driven u wodge bc.ty icn 
the nffectlon.s of these nations. 

It would seem that there is a 
regiment or two of Kuropcau pesal- 
mists, who are bound to drum up 
another war. They persist in talk¬ 
ing It day and night. That Is a mojd 
dangerous practice. If, lustca*!. their 
time was occupied as Industrioucly In 
decrying war, In reminding the people 
of the In.st world catastrophe, of the 
saerlflcc.s and .'oiffcrlngs of the ixtpu- 
lalio'n, of tin* millions ol wounded and 
mutilated htiman beluga, there vaud*! 
bo some expeetani'y that another viu 
woul<l not come. Hut If these peddlers 
of calamity continue to preai’h their 
sinister prophecioa war Is pretty nure 
to happen. There i.n a new crop of 
ca*unm fodder rca'l^' for the harve:.\ 
The l)oy8 who were seven ynirfi td 
age In 3011. are now twenty, able to 
carry a rifle, capable of l)clng Irair.Hi 
into the tricks of carnage. That serim 
to U(‘ pufllcient for certain Kuroix an* 
who keep the war pot boiling. N«i 
doubt the makers of armameut an* 
eager for the liarvcsk 

In well-organized, senhllflo c<m- 
mnnitics the preacher.*? of dange»-ou. 
doelrine.s arc run out of town. That 
would apfH'ar to bo the appropiiaU* 
treatment of these next-war prcidu'ts 


An earthquake In the outlying dis 
t riots of Rangoon, the severent In 
r.urnm for yeara, has causiMl wide¬ 
spread damage and several <*asnal- 
ties. 

Most of the loading dog ‘muAhern ' 
on the continent will compete In The 
Pas TuternaM'nal Porhy over a dis¬ 
tance of 120 miles on March 13. M 
and ir». inclusive. 

Int'orporation of the Pritish < ol- 
iimhla Alrwavs. Limited, la finnoimc- 


Kxplanalions and f'omninids 

I. The Title Of the Gospel, verse 
1. This la the gosi>el of Jerus (’hrist,; 
the Son of God. Our word j^fispcl Is, 
compound of the two Anglo-Saxon 
words gtKl, meaning gooil, and spci, 
meaning news. The word as use<! in , 
the New Testament refers to the mes¬ 
sage of go<Hl tidings, not to one of j 
its first four books, to which It was! 
not applied l>eforo the second century, j 
It Is the good tidings concerning Jesus ; 
the I'hrlst. the Son of God, which 
Mark begins here to recount. This ; 
first verse is Mark’s confession of 
lalth. 

“Kvery time Ghrisl la born in a 
man's heart, the go.spel has,a new, 
beginning. And every other beginning 
of the gospel its beginning in the 
eternal purjMise of God tJohnb Its be¬ 
ginning at Helhlebem i Matthew nnd 
Luke). Us beginning at the Implisni 
(Mark) will Im* of none effect, as far 
us you iiml 1 are concerned, unlrs.s it 
ban another beginning In you and 
me.”- J. I>. Jones. 

II. The Work Of the Koreruim'.'r Of 
t'hrist, verstH 2-S.- Verse 2, 3 and 4 
are all one sculcnco, and nevon wor*ls 
give their meaning, namely, • Kven 
I as it is wrillen, John came." b’or 
I an account of the )>aventH of J<'hn 

and of hts training in the wlldcrnoHS, 
turn to the gospel of Luk*. Verse 2 Is 
from Malachl 3.1. nn<i i.s applied in 
Matthew 11.10 and Luke 7.27 by Jesus 
Himself to John's inin.slon. Verse 3 i.s 
troni Isaiah -lO.ll-ri. .lohii the Itaptist 
was (ftMl'H ine.'^aenger sent to prepare 
the way for Jesus the Son of (kMl. 
lie wa.s the voice in the wihlevnoss 
annouiK’ing the coining of tno lx)id 
and warning men to be ready. Instead 
of di.scour.Gng U|H)n the material 
glory of the MesHlanlc period, as was 
the universal custom, .lohn insisted 
that there were lequirenvnts to l>o 
fultllled, and turned men’s thoughts 
away fiom the (tutwurd and material 
to the iuxvard aiul spliituul. 

'The revival of religion n<'e*led to¬ 
day to prci'are for the fuller coining 
of the Son of Man int*> our earthly 
life and to secure that richer bap¬ 
tism of all our relationship.*? in the di¬ 
vine spirit, is a revival strongly tlh- 
Ical and genuinely social, rather tJiaii 
ecclcstlenl or emotional. the call 
i8.««ue nortli, south, cast and west, for 
an ‘alxait face’ towards lighleousness 
in the common relations of tveryday 
life! ’Then all flesh may ."ee the .sal¬ 
vation of God:’ Gharies KeynokI.s 
Hrowii. 


JAMKS DUFF <11 II.D 

who has been npiKilnted Msst.stant to 
the Agricultural Agent of the (!'ana- 
dian National Uhllwnys, for the Wist- 
ern Region, with honJipiarter:? at 
Wlnnl|H*g. Ho is a native of Manitoba 
and a graduate of Manitoba Agilcul- 
tural Uollegc. Mr. Guild, who has been 
su|>ervlsor of illustration farm.'j, ul 
Hrandon, succeeds T. P. Devlin, who 
has become siiperintenJent of the 
railway's colonization work ul Saa- 
kido<*n. 


armed robbers held up Uio otiico t»f 
the Mallory Steamship Company. 
New York, and escapixl in an uuto- 
inobile. 

The marshlaiuU that form a great 
purl of the wide valley of the tT'lum- 
bia River, in Rrltish Ooluirbln, con¬ 
tinue to attract fur farmers. A recent 
shipment to this area of 32 black :.rd 
silver foxes a.** well as a pair t'f uVnk 
shows expanding bus ne-r 

A de.'^patch to Th: Umd*'n Paily 
Kxpres.s in'm Jenisilem i-ay- that hf- 
tocn .Tewish workt*rs wore w ■.cultHl In 
e riot at Petali T:k\veh. the largest 
Jewish colony in Palestine, whe b is 
,>f i.ifT:! Twentv i-cis*>ns 


Of Doukhobor 


water can do all that oiled gnin-inotal Steps \re Taken rouards Rvien^hui 
or other liearings can do. and thatl Of ( olaii> In Sasliatcheuaii 
oil for lubrication can bo dispenscnl p^ter Vrregln. Ji .. lead* i of tin* 
with. Rubber bearings have now boon, j jjj ('jumda. has annouiic- 

tosted on heavy machine.s running cd a plan of expansion, centrali/ing at 
5.000 revolutions a minute. A particle Vorogin, Saskatchewan, which cvonl- 
of grit simply rolls acro.ss the ruhber| ^vill have a population of from 

until it is removed by the atcr, ooO to 50,000 DmikliolKirs. The 
which runs through a flue groove hi pia„ cvolvoil by \ (‘regin after a three 
the bearing. Lubricating oil i« used in months stay In Caimda, indicate.*? that 
the machinery in thousands of tuns,' ])resont con.^lituleil will 

nnd some qualities of it are wry ex-' altered, but that the colony at 

pensive. The now system, discovered veregin will be for imniigraiil i from 
and perfected by two Knglish eng.n- central Russia. 

eers. may lead to all kiuu.s of changes padical change.s are invohvd in the 
in high-sj)eed machinery, such j oatalilishment ol the cedony. One of 
ship’s lurbincH. and so on, bringing | outstanding resultH expected is 
about big changes in the running the l>oukhoborH will become ac¬ 
costs. 1 iriik**ti iru in llm of 


Immense Crane Built 


Winnipeg Newspaper Unioo 


For London Railway 


Will XiiloinalU'Hlly Adjust IIhcII In 
Adxerse Wind I'rcsMiro 

An immense crane being erected h; 
coniioction with the Moti'opolUai 
Railway's new $3,750,1)00 huilding. i: 
the lahgest of its kind m the v.auld 
and differs entirely from the Uirc**- 
logged tyjw* now familiar to l.<omlon- 
era. 

It comjirises a single ‘log” ncjtily 
150 feet in height, and Is surrounded 
by a steel laU4cc-work Jih foot 

Umg, while protruding from ami run 
ning down the centre of the “leg " is 
a great steel pivot which enables the 
crane to revolve In a complete lirde 
without diflUailty. 

A feature of parllcular iatcro.‘<l in 
connection with the crane U that It is 
so constructed that when left at nipht 
imattendeil it will automatically ro¬ 
tate, in the manner of a weather vane 
and so a<iju.st itself to any ndvcise 
wind pressure that may arise. 

Tlic area covcrcil by the crane )>■ 
more than 30,000 square ieet. It is ot 
I'lnglish construction throughout and 
is electrically operated by one man 


Canada^s Divorce Rate 


!•« (eiiHideralily Loner 'ihaii Any 
Other Country In World 
Happy ('anadu! It has the lowest 
divorce rate in the worhl. <’oiisidor 
these liguros given at a Motbois’ 
ITnion meeting in London: The irniied 
t^talcs has one divorce in every 7.0 
marriages. Kij*urca lor other n un- 
tries are quoted a.s follow.s: Canada, 
one in 101; Great Hritain, one In flO; 
Sweden, one iii 33; Norway, one in 3o; 
Germany, one in 2-1; New Zoalr.ijd, 
one in 21; Swilzerlaml, one iii JO; 
Japan. <mc in eigiit. Divorce in the 
Ibiitcd StalcH, it i.s added, lias a<I- 
vanced in the past 22 years to one in 
7.0 marriages from one in 17.1. Ho- 
Iween RSTO aii<l RGO there were 2,- 
25n.H(}i» tlivorces in that country 


people they have been sinre coming to 
the country. 

Tho flrst step t*)wards expansion 
has been taken by Veregin. in the 
consolidation and liquiilation of dc'rts, 
and placing the Doukhobors on a 
sound Ihmnoial vvorldng basis. 

Next April the first of Ore DouKbo- 
l>or8 will Ik* brought from Uu?sl.i to 
Veregin. As the land is cloar 'l and 
prepared for cnqrping, others will lol- 
low. and eventually a colony of 50.- 
000 people will form the community. 


Crude Farming In Spain 


Sawdust Treated With Acid MuKrs 
Sulmtanee Suitable For Food 
Sugar from waste woml is forcoa.st 
by a rejwrt made recently by Dr. W. 
U. Ormandy to Uic Society ct Chem¬ 
ical Industry, iu Kngland. Dried fcuw- 
dust is treated in a carcfully-dosigncd 
chemical plant vxdth hydroehloii* 
ackl. This treatment converts the sub¬ 
stance of the wood into a mixture of 
sugars, one of which is ordinary glu¬ 
cose, or corn sugar, a material that 
is perfectly suitable for human f'>od. 
Not all of the «ugar produce*! by the 
process is pure enough for food use, 
although most of it is. Tho by-pro¬ 
duct of impure sugar is to l>e fei- 
mciited into alcohol, wbicii will )m* 
used for motor fuel. 


trap Of lO.OrtO.OOO .Xcres 

Sown and Reaped By Hand 
If the old Homan plow is not soon 
banished from Castile there will be 
danger of a grave economic crisis in 
Spain. The average value cf the 
Spanish wheat crop is about $100.- 
000.000 for an area of 10.000.000 
acres, mostly sown nnd reaped by 
hand. Thousands of sun-blackened 
men, crouching low,' as they toll witli 
sickles through vast fields, betoken 
the backward conditions and the star¬ 
vation wages. As a result of these 
primitive methods Castilian wheat 
cannot compete in the world markets, 
though its quality is renowned 
throueh the fiEcs. Wheat harve.stcd 


I iiHpoilcd B> Honor 
Wo all may profit by tho ox.unplo 
of Patrick Kitzgcruld, veU*ra:i gate 
watchman at Hu* Proctor ami Gam¬ 
ble plant on'Sluteii Ishuid. nuido a 
nu*ml>er of that company's lioard of 
dirci tors. Mr. Kitzgoiakl rciuains im- 
sj>oiU*<l by tlio honor. l..o.*».-:er hiuicls 
have lurncil the heads of thousands 
of men. Mr. Fitzgerald is jtroul to 
remain a gooil gale wat*. hmaii del iv- 
iiig his satisfaction fnnn Hu* »naiiifest 
esteem in vvhl* h his fellow employees 
hold him. 


Would Retain Party Symbol 


Want the Donkey To Syinlmli/** Ho* 
Democratic Party 

A lesulutioii favoring the t-etcijli"u 
ol the donkey as the synibo! of Hu- 
Democratic parly ‘ iM'causc ho I.s n 
docile animal, when pleased, l ut 
knows how to kick when displeased.' 
was passed by tho Democratic aux¬ 
iliary of Philadelphia, a women’s m- 
ganization. 

11 was an answer to efforts of tin 
Women’s Dnuocratic club which le- 
ccntly voloil to urge the su'osLitulion 
of the Am.^rb an' Kagle for Hu* lUm- 
kcy. 


Document Too Binding 


* ” Decidedly smart Is the ino(*ish 
frock jilctured here. The two-piece 
2 of fiared skirt is joined to ‘he bodice 
The having a vcslee with roun l nock, and 
heat Ibc long dart-tilted sleeves are fii.ish- 
rd with shaped ruffs. No. 1700 is in 
sizes 34. 36. 3S. 10 and 42 Inches bust. 
Size 38 requires 2*8 yards aO-inch. or 
use 2L yards 54-inch mateiKil. and •}* 
iu- yard 36-lnch contrasting. l*ricc 20 
cents Uie pattern. 

I K\ cry woman’s desire Is to achieve 

different appearance 


'I'oo Many ftuk'H For Higlihuid 
i r(»f(<‘r ’I'o Sign 

An amu.sing story of a Highland 
<*rufu*r was told hy a member of tho 
Scottish laiiid Court, at the annual 
dinner of the ('aithness Associulion. 
The cn)fler hud arranged with the 
(4ovcinnu*n» for a loan to build a 
house. A document (ontaining 22 
conditions \va.s sent fur signatiue. 
The crofter unite back: f am send¬ 
ing you bac k y<iur pajH*r. I will not 
sign it. Do you think 1 am going to 
keep 22 rul<‘H for a bit hou.se on cailh, 
when for keeping 'fen Coininand- 
ments God will give me a mansion in 
the skies ?” 


Nothing To Hindi*!’ 

A young London girl who wa.s holi¬ 
daying in the country became rather 
friendly with a young farmer, (aio 
evening a.*? they wore strolling in the 
fields they happened across a cow end 
a calf rubbing noses in tiie ucc«i t» »i 
bovine fashion. 

“Ah,'' said the young farmer, “that 
sight makes me want to do the saiiu*.” 

“Well, go ahead,” said Uic girl, en- 
courngingly. “Ifs your cow'.” 


The length of the skirt delermiues 
tho amount of taxes paid ijy ilw v/o- 
mon of Almandraijeo, Spain. A wo¬ 
man show'ing only her ankles pays the 
minimum. 


that smart 
wliich draws favorable comment from 
the observing public. The designs 
illustrated in our new Ka.shion Rook 
are originated in the heart of the 
style centres, and will help you to ac¬ 
quire that much-desired air of indi¬ 
viduality. Price of the book 10 cents 
the copy. 


Jack -‘'D»*ar. 1 told you not to .slay 
up for me.” 

^Yife—“You're all wrong. I’m Just 
getting up.” 


i'oii'^iiinplloii Of Alcohol 
The per capita consumption of al¬ 
coholic spirits in rmiadu for the fis¬ 
cal year ending March 31, 1927, was 
f)l per cent, below that of the uvciLge 
for the past fifty-eight years,'btulis- 
tics issued by the department of na¬ 
tional revenuo show'. The ligures dis¬ 
close tlial in tlie pa.st half century tho 
avcingc consumption iki’ annum for 
each person in fCanada is 80 per cent, 
of one gallon of Hpirits, but for the 
fiscal year 3920-27 this consumjilbiu 
was only 32 per rent, of a gallon. 


Western Breeder lias Great Triumph 


Silk c/)coonB gathered In Ju 
g the fall season welglu d 
O.OOO.OoO pounds. 


To ihit It Briefly 

Prince Arthur of Gonnau;;ht Iclls 
an amu.sing tale yf his experiences 
when serving as Governor-Gencial of 
South Africa. He hud made a jour¬ 
ney up the Zumboui to some of the 
paramount chiefs. One of Iheni made 
a speech of welcome whlcii took 
three-quarters of an hour to deliver. 
When ho hud linished, a native iiUcr- 
preter came forward to explain the 
oration. Pointing to the chief, the in¬ 
terpreter discharged his task with a 
single sentence: “Him say him daiii 
pleased to sec you!” 


How To Order Patterns 


Address—Winnipeg Newspaper (JaloQ« 
175 McDeruioi Ave.. Winnipeg 


More tlian a million rablo yards of 
garbage is low*d in bargt'H frrun N» w 
York city to sea for dumping monthly. 


Paiiero No 


For every gold brick on the mar 
ket there is a purcha.ser born. 


Nsone 


Town 


A B«hiii To ( liihlreii 
In the woods near Berlin arc a num- 
number of “vacation recreation 
grounds” set aside by the city fyr the 
benefit of its children. For the sum 
of thirty-six cents a week youngsters 
are transported dally to and from 
these parks and arc gi\ en three meals 
while there. 


In addition to paying imn'e than 
one hundred dollars for a driver s 
license in Germany, the applicant 
must pass an extremely rigid menial 
and physical examination. 


'olullon 7th,, Francisco, nnd Harlan, Iowa; \V. A. 
.senior and: McGregor, Briaroliff P'arms, lac., 
Black Lass [pine lUains, New Y'ork; Jack Brown, 
ow and sen- i hcrdj?man, Glcncarnock Farm:?, Dran- 
illa of Glen-, don; Ja.s. D. McGregor, Glcncarnock 
ear-old heif-j Farms, Brandon; Kenneth McGregor, 
er; Gleacurnock Jessie 9th, first prize j Hartley Stock Farms, I'ago, North 
to je- junior yearling and junior and grand, Dakota; Prof. W. H. Pew, Hiiarcllff 
UiQuake ^ ^’***^*^'P^®*' female, at Uie Chicago In-1 Farms, luc., l*ine Plains, New York; 

I ternalional Kxjjosition, 1927. All four' Oakleigh Thorne, Biiarcllff Kaniis, 
I animals bred at Glcucurnock Slock | Inc., Pino IMuius, New YTorU; nnd 
cu from ' Farms, Brandon, Man. In Uie back- Prof. Kildec, Judge of the Aberdeen 
iia, rre I ground, from left to right: 11. O. Angus cuttle at Uic recent f'liicago 
jliurrlsun, of Harrison & Uyau, Han International Kxposition. 


Great Jlrliuln now claims all tho 
speed records for acroplam*, bubmar- 
Ino, steamship, railway, automobile 
and motorcycle. 


Y'okohama, Japan, expects 
move all truces of the car 
w'ilhin IS months. 


AND PIU'DKNCn 
madam!'' .Moustlquo, 


Hawaii now boustA^oiio uutumobDo 
for every 10 juTsons, while tho proper 
lion la the United Htal??.? la only one 
to every six. 


“The line is too slun't, but it diji'.m't 
maU**r, us 1 haven’t caught anything 
yi t!” -Sondag.smlb: u-Stri.\. Stut’l.fi iiu 













" . f 




*r ^ ^ 


THE RECORDER. RAY^rO^’D. ALTA'. 


Reform Of, Senate 
Now Said To Be 
Abandoned For. Present 


May Not Be Raised 


Mining Men In Winnipeg 

OwnofM Of Mining I*ro|»fr* 

I ties \ NI1 WoMorii rUy i 

Wlnnlpog^. llilHtcnd hlmlHloy, 

prcHiJlcnt of Sherrill (lonU'ii Mlncn. 
r^lrl.. ami Noah A. Tlmmln«, presi¬ 
dent of Uolllnf'cr ('onaolldaled fJold 
MinoM. and an Important Bharehj>Idcr 
In Sherrill Oordon, which ownii n Mr 
' ropi>cr properly al f’old Lak^. r.5 
iniloH norlhcasl of Klin IMoii. In' 


(Juccn of the Carnival 


Norlherii Manitoba, are now In \\ In- • 
nipoK- I 

11 Ib Indlcvod IiniKirtant <leveIoj)-' 
menlH in connccllon with Ihc Sher¬ 
rill (tonlon and Its relaliondiip to 


- O 

OUawa Tile Senate of I'anada is 1 
not to be reformed despMe the aims ; 
of I'rrmicr MaeUen/.lo KinR. H.ral ho “ 

the nin^ 5 ’-fl*x venerable nienders of ^'*****'''' f^nltmarlne \!a> Not lie 
Ih" tipper house may rosl heeu*-o that ^ Salvaged I’lifll Spring 

their uppoinlmentH are lor life v.Uir l*rovinreto\v'n, Mans. Tlio sunki’i 
sulaiioa of S4.(KM> por year. ; HUhmarlne S-4. which Ilea in 17 fnth- 

Kor Home yoiirK Iho piiine miiiiH-' of water off this har1v»r. piot a- the province have lirought the two 
ter'a hope was to reform the ponale. rais-d until next niliiinR rlitcftnlns to Wtnnipefj. The 

Some HURRealiona in Ihia repaid were Oflieera of the Hoot of naval While Mud power atte and the cxt.cn- 

to have an elected -ionate, a ten-your ,aanembled here to Ralvll(^o the aion of the Kiln Klon railway to the 
term for apixilnleea to (he upper voaaci let this fact l>e definitely cold l-ako property are proliably be- 
houHe. or retirement when r.n ap- liiR dlaeusaed with the llracken Oov- 

poiiilee reaihed the aRe cf 7-% years, j Itcnr-Admfral Prjxnk H. Ilruniby, orr.nicnt. 

Kour of the oldoat provinceii in directing aalvaRO operations, r.atcl the .. _ 

funada Ontario, Quebec. Nova f co- would ro on while v'oathcr eon- 

tia and New IJrurnwlck .served no- ditioiia remained favorable, but snld 

ticea on the premier it u'ih im?'<''SHlbIe tis soon as normal winter v.oath- ' • 

to relorm the senate without relorm- would be suapoiided. UomelesH Klnnisli n<»y Diseoxcred In 

tiiR the coiiRUtutiim and to this they "We are roIhr ahead with thia Cave Near Son 

were (ipposed. work n.s fast na \vc can nutll the ^ Fault Kte. Marie, Out. -After 

The re.siUt ia Mr. Kinff will uban- weather halts it nr the Navv Poj nrt- apendinR 70 iilRhts and days In a 
don any hope of aenate reform which »***t»t enlls operations off, ' he ardd. makeshift cave in th^ dense woods of 
ho was expected to present to pallia- "’rimn wt will cease until rprliiR oral the Oouliiis IJay urea, Kino Kiiu.sOla, . 
ment at the approadiinR aeasion. work that la beiiiR done new will 

It is said the prime iniiit.ster Is r«>l have to bo rci>enled.” 


Lived Like a Bear 



Hickman Is Arrested 
As The Kidnapper And 
Slayer Of Young Girl 


o 


averae to appointing women lb the 
senate. One (.’unadian Apinstri Ml^s 
ARiiea Mcl’hall lias sat in th-» lloii.ic 
of Commons lor six yea’.s, and hna 
turne<l out to bo ipiito an i!.‘*tute 
politician. 

Perhaps Premier Kih.f't aim to re¬ 
form the Hciiale l.s duo to the fact 
that when he a.sautncd Oiik-e in IhLM 
he found a Conservative riinjority of 
•tr». This didn’t comfort idni, iillhoURh 
virtually every Prime Minister of the 
! dominion had the an:ne experience. 

When Sir Wilfied I.»auricr occamo 


12, a homeless Klnnlsh lad. has been 
discovered alive and well. 

The statement was ina<lo attir ten In 20 below zero weather iCino has 
clivers deacendexl to ih-3 Minkeii e ib-, lived contentedly like a l>ear In a hole, 
marine ami Coiiimamler Kdward Klla- f«i' more than two months, feeding on 
beiR. in charge of dlvIuR opcruilora. turnips lilchcd from the farm vliicli 
nimoat loat hla life v.dicn he hetamc h^' deserted when conditions, lie 


MIhh Ikiilic Ma.sou. who v/ill reign 
as (picMi of the forlhcopiing Panff 
Winter Carnival, at Hanff, in the 
tl’aiinrllaii IbHkic.s. <lurinR the only 
part of Kebniary, ]k2H, Mis.i Manon 
is a (’jilgary girl and a devote-* of 
winter ajiorl.s. 


Adopts Naval Plans 


bogged in the mini on the ocean 
floor. 

It was jioinled out by .several ofll- 
rers after a conference attended by 
Adiiiiial Priimby, Commander Flla- 
borg ami Captain Kriiest F. King, ua- 
aociatod In the salvage work, U at if 
favorable weather continued the rub- 
marine could l>c salvage 


became unbearable. 

The lad accused Krank McKaug- 
hann, farmer. In whose hands he was 
placed by the Children’s Aid Society, 
of threatening to kill him. Police have 
Kino in charge now. while a rigid in¬ 
vestigation l.s going on. 


I’rance Ihiildiiig Itoats In \e<>(trd 
\\ itii WashiiiRtoii .Agrc'Mueiil 
Paris. The Krench naval program 
for 1927 to 1931. which was stated lo 
be fully 01 agreement with the Wa-^li- 
ingtoii accoid, wa.s pas.sod by the 
Chamber of DepuUe.s at a sjiecial cts- 
sloii. The volmg was by a show of 
hands, the Socialists abstaining. 

Hefon the vote was taken the So- 
ciali.sts announced tliat the proptam 


Saskatchewan Assembly 

Annoiiticcinciit Made Ihe House Util 
Open Alioiil Middle Of .laniiary 
Uegina. The third se.sslon of the 
sixth Saskatchewan begislalivc As- 
isciiibly will open either Tuesday, 
.lanuary 17, c»r Tuesday. .lanu iry 24. 
according to an announeemont (if 
Premier .1. fJ. (lardiner. 

Premier (Tardinor said he had no 
statement to make regiPidliig (»d- 
Manding Icgislution that might l>e 
lirougbl down ilurlng the session. 

When Mr. .*^pc*akor. W. C. Ib'bln- 
aon (Kraneis), lakes lil.s seat theie 
will Im* three new nu'inhers to M* in¬ 
troduced to the House, three by-elec¬ 
tions having taken place since th(' os- 
senibly rose early In tin* year. H. M. 
Itobertson. Lawson, who was elected 
to fill the vacancy.for the M(*r.se (f»n- 
stilueiicy, caused by the suddou (teath 
.of W. P. McLa<hlan, Morse, is one of 
the new members. The second is W. 
(t. Itosa. K.(\. Moose .Inw, who was 
elected lo repiesent Moose? .law City 
upon the elevation of W. K. Knowles, 
K.C.. to the bench. Tin* third newcom¬ 
er l.s Hon. (icorge Spem e, who n?- 
turns to the proviin ial Hold H orn the 
Kcderal House to represent Maple 
Creek consliluviiicy in sm ec. do!i to 


Pemlletoii, Ore. (’liinaTiuiR Hie 
most speetaculnr man-hunt ^hc P ici- 
fle con.st has known in yenr.a, WilHam 
}*>lward I lickman, 1 D-.v* ar o Id \ ugi- 
live wanted as the Itldnapper and 
Hlay«V of Marin n Parker, 12 year-old 
Los Angeles girl, w is captured at 
Keho, Ore., near here. ' 

Hte kinun. ti ailed «Jo.wely by repot ts 
of bis progress from •^cattle, when' 
he had spent »*ne of llie $2n bills he 
look from the girl’s f*ith‘-*r in I./>m 
A ngeles, was found by tw.i Pendleton 
ofllceiH on tin c»ld ()r'*?.;on Trait ns ho 
sped along in a large car v.lneh had 
lieen btolen at t^os Ain-,elts. 

He was taken without le^i.-jlamo. 
A 8aw(*d-off shotgun x.as found iii the 
e.ar iiesldt* liiin. 

The penalty for mur-j -r in (*ahf(*r- 
nia is life irn]uisonm.nt. 

Hickman laughed hyslciicHMy win n 
ho wa.s told a» the Pendleton ('ity 
Jail that ho was the innrdcicr of 
Marian Paikor. Ih* it flrst refused to 
admit lil.s own mime, but later b»oko 
down and conb'.^sed Ids identify. He 
said the girl was kill *d last Friday, 
lait in his first stntcm r.t (‘.rcllmd to 
tak<i reHjK»n:nl)i!ity for tin* sl'iyiiuT. 
He said it was the work (* A "lit nd.’’ 
TTie girl, be .*^Jiid. was rtrangled with 
wire. 

I.alcr be eonfes.-i 1 tie wanted the 
money obtaine<l in Jin* kiduappii g to 


a • • • rcsuniptloii of Hu* rnco in 

. ^ -r, Chinese Pirates Again Active lu-nvy tonnage." 

Prime Minister in l.sfld tie was K^n- ''Hhin a week. Flic navy department 
IroiUod with a Conservative majority ordered that the saWavfing rhould be 


P. Hyde, who resign(*d. 

^one of the three l>y-clerti«»n.s st- go to (oll**ge. 
lected the party standing, v. hich re-. Subjeetod to a lliekinrn 

mains al 7)2 on the (Iovc*rnim*nt side soblu'd out the name of Aiidicw 
of the House and to on the Opposition < Yamer of Los Aiigeles, ;*.( nn an oin- 


in the upper house cf GO. This rontin- I»os.nhlo." it was 

lied until IlHt:; when the Conrorva- tl'ls Interpeetod as iv.car- 

llv(*s died and llnally ttie Liberals had Ing as soon as the work couid be dene 
a majority by virtue of ttiu va- aiieies without endangering the Jives of the 
idled by Liljcials. When jjlr Uohert divers. 

Ilordeii'a Conservative adinini; ! ration Inasmuch as the officers and iiien 
wa-s elected in 1911, th*' I^ilierals had ^*'1 *'■1**^ dead, those in (Jiarge 

a majority of 31 in the ujipcr hwise. j''f salvage work said it would he fool- 
__ __ - f hardy to risk the lives of divers lo 

Find Work In Vancouver rrUS “S 

spring, they said, if those )lpccling it 
Lake Sailors Seei.re Winter .l..bs sncriflcc the lives of 

lx»adlng Lrain several divers in the effort. 

Vaiieouvcr. P*.C. The arrival of _ __ 

largo lumiberH of trump .steamers to •. I_ II • ‘l n Ci 

Umd grain here ha.< developed mx In- lYISUlltOUSl UUlVCrSlty DCnClIlS 
t ct estiiiR feature 


Hritisli 


Charles Denicloii, who sponsored 
Capture Tug Hut Crew declared it was fully in ac- 

Kscapes On Lund *^^t*^* Washington agreement. 

Umdon -The Hritish admiralty . '^he program for 1927. which mu.- be 
stated that pirates have again become completed before June, 192H. .includes 
active on the Vanglse River in the cnii; cr of 10,000 tons, six deslroy- 
noighborliood of Shuns, in the pr*iv Ave .ubmarinos of the fir-it (lass, 

inee of Hupe’-* resulting in quick rc- sul):ii'ivine mine layer, au 1 two 

tnliaUon by Hritish gninboats. I dospab h ivoats. 

A pirate tug was caj^ured but the ■ ■ 

crew escaped on land. A convoy of 
lighters also was attacked by pirates 
from the river bank and the convoy¬ 
ing gunbvjats replicci with their full 
armament. I 

There are four Hritish vessel.? now 

l 

on the Pirate patrol. 


Veteran Hunter Killed 


To 


ill lalK>r and ^Tin- 
rouver is now looked to by lake sail- 
or.s to jirovide winter jobs. Men fi(jin 
the Clreal Lakes Heels arc airiving 
here lo take on with the drep sea ves¬ 
sels in order to keep enijdoycd iinlil 
navigation again opens on the llde- 
lesH freshwater^ oceans. 

Kmploymeiit Is l>elng found l(*r 
llieiy in many inslaiieea, either on the 
tramps or on some of the coasl-wiae 
vessels whose regular men want to 
lake a Christmas holiday layoff. 


.African Sporlsniaii Falls \i<*1ini 
lnfiii'ia1<‘d \\ oundt'd Fh*pbuut 
Nairobi. Kenya. William Judd, 
African sjKirl.sman, known through¬ 
out the big game world for his prow¬ 
ess in Uie hunting ru ld. has fallen 


side. 

Still Seeking Taxation 

Of Soldiers’ Lands 

Prairies <'oiitiniihii; ITght Savs 
Pr<*Hid*>iit or .\llM*rta 
.Miiiiieipal Ihstrict 
Kdrnonton. Miinieipal districts of 
the three piairic districts will (on- 
llnue to pie.H.s for removal oi llic Sol¬ 
dier Settlement Hoard from under tlie 
Crown or for the right to tax ail nnee 
patented land occupied by S.S.H. set¬ 
tlers, or held by the Ixiard, slates 
John (lair, president Allierla Associa¬ 
tion of Municipal L>i.“lrlcls. 

Arrangemculs are under v.ay b-r 


plh e in the Jiorrihle crime. Hickn .''ii 
said he him.sidf h.ad no i»art In the ac¬ 
tual killing and mu d vth>:i. and dtd 
not know the girl ha-l been >datn nntil 
her body was deliveii*d to h-r.i i’l h’s 
H»*lh*vue Ajuirtiiient. 


New “Sub” Is World Beaier 


I(ec(*i\(‘s tiranl Of $H9,00<i l-'roui tin 
I'uniegie Foimdutloii 


ICeports luirge Iticrca'iO ... 

Victoria. H.C. Hritish CoJiimbia’s ' a victim lo the daiiRcr.-? of Jiis favoi- J‘»Ait meeting of the municipal rs 

.social ions of the three intere.sted pro- 


honey crop for 1927 totalled 986.719 ite sport after braving th)*ni succesa- 

Winnipeg. The CurnegU- fouivlu-* I>o>>>>->3 •‘>>‘1 ''■« valued at $217,078. , fully for 30 yoarn. 

I..n .or .ho ,..K.nnro,..,.n. of ....a.-nioe compa.od With 81)8,257 iK.uu.ls Valued, Ulule hunWuB at MahoUKaK.,., la 


Rust Control 


New Li«bl Thrown On ITiN .Mo**! 

Important (pr*stloa 
Toronto. Prof. I. J. 1’.. McLeod, of 
the Univcr.sity of Toronto, rctcircd to 
the importance of the discovery ( f a 
ireatnieiit for grain rust aimounced 
i)y Dr. J. H. Craigie of Hu; Domin¬ 
ion Ru.st !.,alx)iatory. 

* (*1 algie’s discoveries llincv new 
light on the subject and suggest that 
lids menace to crops may nov; lie c«>n- 


lion lor the advanccmonl of toacniiig 
has voted a sum of $80,000 to tne 
TIniver.sity of Manitoba, In connection 
with a pension scheme for nicmbers 
of the university’s staff. 

It l.s idanned to supplement the pen¬ 
sions of those more than 40 \ears 
old now on the staff, provided the 
university contributes an equal 
amount lo that contributed by nuim- 
bers of faculties who enter the pen¬ 
sion scheme. The $80,000 will not be 
available to the university unless such 
eonlribulion la made. 

The ('arnegie foundation was form¬ 
ed in 1905 when Andrew Carnegie 
gave lo a Ixiard of trustees $10,000,- 
000 to be utilized to pension college 
proiessors after about 25 ycar.i’ ae- 
tive service. 


at $197,616 last year. Vancouver Is-: was charged by an infuriated wound- 
land show'8 un incroo-so of more than ed elephant which mangled him as 
100 in the number of apiaries, wldlc his son buttled vainly lo save him. 
in the UpjMir (’ountry districts, par- Young Judd llnally killed the enraged 
ticularly the Okanagan, also repoi l(*d bou.st but the veteran hunter wn.s dead 
large increases. ! when his son reached his sldv*. 


hAPP 


Value Of Hiiildlng PermiN 
Ottawa.--The value ol budding 




Vinces lo be held at Regina in Jan¬ 
uary. when a jurlher plan of action 
will bo coiifddcred and a later on¬ 
slaught upon Ottawa will probably 
follow. 

It i.s the lixed intention of tii-* .as¬ 
sociation.? to (ontinue the war until 
they have aeldeved one or other of 
their objecfive.a, aivl in view of the 
good progre.ss made during the past 
ye ar oflleials of the .\lbcrta Associa- 
lion beli»‘ve that pro.spect.s for success 
ill the near future arc very eneour ig- 


Moiist(*r I iuler-\\ att*r < riii*«(*r H«*Ii)g 
Heing Built In I ranee 
J’aiV- Kraiicc has laid the keel of 
the greatest of all submarine.'?. a 
mon.sler under-water 11 uiser. It will 
be l.oou i<»nH huger than the V-l. 
which made the Pnited Stales 1« rd 
of tin* depths. The new French sab- 
mariiu* will be a 3,000 tonner, a v. ar- 
ship which can stay on the surfjne 
, f.iiiU match strength willi tuiy erul ci 
or slij) under the surface and I.ay 
mines or .sow de.structioii ainon.r « 'p* 
ital .ship.s. 

The .Hubmarine cnd.scr, with a I ’ew 
of loo, has many novel feature.-^ m 
her coiHtruction. Iiu hiding luel t:ii;l:s 
l»> enable her to rriii.^c lialf way 
across the ocean witlumt nsing to the 
surface. 


Connect Flin Flon By Phone 


ing 


\> Ire Helv\ c n 
and Mining 


Mission To Canada 


HAT YOU 
May Have a Prosperous 
Year Is Our Sincere Wish 


I iid»*r Secr<*tary Ol '<la(e 
Ooiididon MYair^ 'I'o Come 
ller(* .Next Sumiiier 


l*raj(*rl To rrovlde 
M ilildpeg. I.i* l’:is 
Area 

Winniju'g. To provide lelepnonic 
'communication between Wiiinipvg 
• and The Ibi.s and the Klin Klon i :;ii- 

I 

I ing area in Northern Manitob.i, 1'-. 

1 or Manitoba telephone system i . iiegoii- 


jating for the jnirchase of the existing 
telephone sysldii al Tlie \vb.»Ji 

l,,ondon. The Daily News under- is a purely local line (^per.ai d by Hu* 
stands that arrangements are V;cing town as a municipal utility. 


trolled." Prof. McLeod sail, pointing; permils issued by 03 ('anadian, cities ' 
out that u niellvKl of treatment has | during November was $12,849,089.' 
been .sought for half a century. Mil -1 This represents a .scasomU decline of 
lioni; of dollurs mimially would be $5,989,469 compared with the October i 
saved if the treatment proved success- figures but un increase of $2,S73,C')S 
lul with held grain i rops. over November. 


Project A New Line 
From Peace River 
To The Pacific Coast 


the 


Vancouver. Hcliiiid 
of the (’anadinn Northwe.stern Rail¬ 
way, formerly know'ii as Uie I'ortiaUil 
Canal Short Lino Railway, from Sii 
Sir Donald Mann by Hon. H. 11. Stev¬ 
ens, M.P., W. A. Lewtliw'aile un.l as- 
.sueiutes lies the vision ol a main lino 
acrcs.s Hritish (’olumbla connecting 
the (’oast with the Peace River Dis¬ 
trict. 

In more immediate jiroapoet i.s the 
cxpecltttion of providing iraiupoilir- 
lion for miners in the coast distrid, 
and of developing greater limber lim¬ 
its w’hkTi lie not far from Stcwnil, tlie 
terminus of llic road. Krectioa of a 
suw'mlll and a pulp mill at .SU waut 
and huinc.ssiiigwater powa r in Ihe 
district whieli will be served by tlie 
ruid may re.suU. 

Rccotrilticnlng of »hc road will 


pu.vhase start at the bcgiiiniiig of the New 
Year, when fifteen miles of line from 
Stewart to Ucdcliffe will be put In 
shape. Jl will he ready for cpoiutlon 
by August, 1928. 

3’hl.s section of tlio road w'lll serve 
a number of mines which are Ix-ing 
develop(*d in the dl.striet. It will also 
bo utilized as a logging railway in 
connection with a sawaiilll to be creel¬ 
ed in the vicinity of Stewart. 

An extension of six miles up Heav¬ 
er River will be undertaken and hii- 
Irhed by August. 1929. This will serve 
the 
and 
mining 



made for Lord Lovut, umler sei rctaiy 
of slati* for Dominion Affairs, to i in- 
bark next summer on a mis.siou to 
Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and 
South Africa, mainly witli the object 
of Infusing n» \v life into the empirc’.-i 
migration a. tiviilies. 

Lord Lovut jirobably will as.si.st in 
tile detailed negutialioii.s in caeji of 
the Uuminiuns which will AjIIow tJu* 


If negotiations arc .'?ue 
luteiJayeis will be askeo 
tlie |)n>[Mi.sal al a 
.March. 


the 

’(I end >» ■<e 
bv-lav’ *. >*t.- in 


B.( . J.limbi r I'or Siunl.ui 
New \\■e(*.^tmin.sl^ r. R.C. Dc -iiji d 
for the .Soudan Railway, new in 
course of »‘'>nslruclioii. two ni’lli' n 
feet of tics will i»e .*^hippc'l fjom I’li- 


dcpartmenlal discu.s.sions on th** ( \- tish Columbia. Dei ember 27. Ab o. ly 
ploratory enquiries about lo be inad«‘ considerable .*?hii)ment.s I'.avc l.(«n 
by Lieut.-(’ol. L. C. M. S. Ainery, see- juade to Kgypt and large (lUantMi s 
retary of st.atc for Doniinion Affairs. ^ for Hritish railways 

Make Effort To Secure 
Seed Grain Rate 

On No. 1 Wheat 


WiimIjM'g. An effort lo secure stjcd j that 7.5 per eenl. of the wh* .it 
grain rates on No. 1 wheat, equal to | was No. 3 i which contain.^ ao. i t 

those obtaining ut pio.sent on regis- 


Merry Party For Canadian Homes 

Waving good bye to their native shores did not seem lo dcpia-js the 


l(.red seed, was made hero when a 
group of seed fijieciahsts met repre¬ 
sentatives of the Canadian FTtight 
Assoeiulioii. 


20 wild (.at s(*(*(l:i to tin* puuiel. 

'riiere wa.s an urgent demufid. ll 
expelts said, that ('anadinn ((d 
.should be improved 

Decision of the freight as;?uci- ."H 
i.i e.MJeeted short Iv. 



country ucros.s 


AlltuitJc 


present project 

ed for 1928-29. and Hon. Ii. H. Slev- experieuees that would befall them in 
en.s is now' in Knglaiid in (onneclioii which they had heard so mu(h about. 

The pholograjih w'as taken as the gioup were on their way lo board Ph 


with umblllouH plaiw which lliC tmn 


paiiy 


lia i in view. 


iCaiKidian Pacilie liner Moiffclare. 


for No. i wheat, fanners would m.c 
this quality and a better grade of 
wheal would be jnoduced. A recent 
,rurvev in 1.5 w<*stein distrlrl.s .Mhowid 


represented grain organizalloj.s 
the meeting. 

V. N U 1713 




I 








The International Mind 


Eskimo Curiosity 


riayintf An 

Expensive Came 


i Would Form 
i New Province 

I -- ' Time neqiUred In From Klfrht To 

(tenerni Hrlve Mtiirtrtl In Feare Rher Thirty Year* 

To l-'iirlhor Movement Abandoned farms In the firy areas 

At n recent meeting of the Peace of the Western prairies If left alone. 
Ulvcr lionrd of Trade, a committee In from eight to thirty years, depund- 
was formed for the purpose of com- ing on various factors, return to grriss 
pilins full details of the cause for covered condition. In studies given 
grievance that \v<'rc the means of to this question. Dr. S. hi. Clarke, of 
initiating the campaign of the lVa(e the Division of Forage Plants of the 
Uiver HeconI and the Grande Prat- Experimental Farms, has discovered 
rie Herald for the inauguration of a that the vegetation on aba?idoned 
new province. A general drive is land that has once been cultivated 
being undertaken and a full report appears to go through definite succ es- 
wlll bo made nt the annual meeting sive stages. After being abandoned 
early in the new year. Contrary to the the land soon becomes covei'.M .with 
belief expressed in several dolly pa- weeds, chiefly Russian Thistle and 
pers, throughout Canada that it Is Tumbling Mustard. Thc.se plants are 
too big an undertaking for a new follow'ed In a few years by Artemis- 
'country, the north co\intry has been las, popularly known In some sections 
receiving encouragement from the as pig weeds. Western Couch Grass 
different organizations situated with- soon, however, makes its ai)pearRnce 
in the proposed boundaries of tlio new and crowds out the other weeds. Thi.s 
province. In time appears to give way to other 

Plans for the raising of finances native snocies such as Spear Grass, 
for the purpose of sending delegates (?rama Gross. June Grass, and peas, 
to Prince Rupert and into northern Thus In time the fields return to nl- 
Pritish Columbia to attend the dlfTer- most the original prairie condition. In 
ent anmiol inectinr.s cf tho several the report of the Forage Crops Idvl- 
boards cf trade interested are under alon for 1926. issued by the Depart¬ 
way. Thai the two major pn^blrms ment cf Agricuflure at Ottawa, and 
enumerated by I’remler t'ro'vnlec which cnotaina useful information on 
I the IVace River Highway and the stock fodders. It is announced that ex- 
Paciflc (’oast ouM 't vdll i)c support- perimcnla are being planned W'ith a 
cd by a formi''.:il:le list of compluinta view to hastening the return to grass 
cannot be <l.'nled. This list will be of abandoned w'cstern farms 
submitted to the various organiza¬ 
tions in the movement for upprrAal 
before being piibllshdd. The move¬ 
ment is gaining momentum, ii 't los- 
ling. 


Usefulneu Of Maps 


AbinAined Farmi 


Rehirn To Grass 


People Are Realizing Mofc and More 
Their %'ahie 

When the art of printing was first 
utilized for the publication of books 
only a small proportion of the popula¬ 
tion in any of the then civilized coun¬ 
tries of the world could read and In 
fact It was a long time afterwards be¬ 
fore generally could use books for 
them.selves. Nowadays mors books 
are being sold than ever before, but 
people buy them to read and use. 
With better general education the 
greater demand for books of all kinds. 
The same may l>e said to be true of 
maps; as more people learn to use 
them* so does the demand increase; 
and it is equally true that one must 
learn 4.0 road a map and be able to 
use It, Just ns one must learn to toad 
words before the printed page is of 
any significance. A map is not a word 
picture, nor Is U a photograph, al¬ 
though it contains clemenls of lioth. 
Especially is this true of the topo¬ 
graphic map which is the most com¬ 
plete example of the, map-maker's 
skill and serves many puri>oKCS. It is 
the record of the natural and cultur¬ 
al features of any area, and one of the 
means of aiding development. Such a 
map shows the arable lands; indus¬ 
trial areas; forest area.s; mineral 
areas; water power sites and storuge 
basins; reclamation projects; irriga¬ 
tion areas; surface confoi*niatlon, 
etc. 

One of the large map malting or¬ 
ganizations of the Dominion Govern¬ 
ment is the Topographical Survey, 
Department of the Interior. During 
the recent years this Service has l>ccn 
issuing as rapidly as possible topo¬ 
graphic maps of various areas 
throughout Canada, all being co¬ 
ordinated In the National Topo¬ 
graphic series.* Thus, eventually the 


Mors Interested In Strange Animals 
Than Wonders Of Human 
Creation 

Writing In tho Times a few days 
ago, George Palmer Putnam I'ald: 
"Tills last summer In Daffio Island we 
talked nt length about our nnlnuils of 
the Soutli. Our two Eskimo friends, 
Avallsha nnd Kavaou, were far moru 
interested in our account of lions, 
monkeys, elephants and the like than 
In any wonder of human creuttou that 
wo could describe. To them nhiniala 
were rnetly more alluring than sV:y- 
aernpers, railroad trains and nerr>> 
planec. Pictures from zoos and jungles 
fascinated them.*' 

It was natural, then, that thM FsUI- 
inos who m'ore taken to the Zoo for 
the first lime recently, should b»' fas- 
cinaUMi by what they saw, particularly 
the younger members of th© party. 
But are wo ourselves so different from 
the Eskimos? One doubts. I'hero Is 
something about animals that fascln 
ates all of us. When w© riffle through 
the pages of a natural history bo<ik we 
nare likely to Unger much longer over 
the pictures of lions, tigers, anteuters, 
elephants nnd wart-hogs than over tho 
pictures of Hottentot culture, The len- 
son, no doubt. Is that wo pernist in 
identifying ourselves with everything 
wo see. Thus Hottentot culture means 
nothing to us, for wo have no use for 
It and we cannot picture ourselves In 
connoctlon with It, But an nnlninl 
catehes our eye at once, particularly 
if ho looks dangerous. Wo are still 
near enough to tlio jungle to get a 
chill along tho spine from tho sight of 
stripes nnd fur, even though we know 
that there are many thlng.s that hold 
a grentcr-monace. The truth Is that in 
many ways wc are probably just as 
prlmltlvo as the Eskimo.—New >oik 
World. 


4 hieagn Mayor lA>sinR 

'!'li»'i;i:i:h U!s Antl-UrillHh 
( aiiipaigii 

Ihg DiU’.s anti-.lt'hn Pull iiailiivMn- 
att'ins Hie r. d only making ('huar.o a 
laughiHj; :.t<K k bat tlircaten tn bo- 
coin*' a hr.'ivy liability for the city to 
tarty. Mr. John F. McKoowii. a prom¬ 
inent exp irter, hoa made tho chnij’e 
that the Mayor’s campaign has al¬ 
ready root Chicago’s monnfiicMirers 
ai'.d ixpniicr.s $l.r>oo.00i) in l‘»as ol 
hii aeas with .\ustr'i!la. This is a 
li.;. price for ono part of the ci'm- 
rnindy to pay fi>r electing a butToon 
t>- Hie Mayor’s chair, nnd If tiuJc has 
MUli'rtii to th:n extent to dntc the 
lo s u'ill be multiplied in the future. 
An.>:iaha i.s loo tar rcmovcil to iip- 
I>rei ute the humor and ridlru’. 'u.^ness 
of the situ.-itlcii as di>e.^ ' nr.ad.'i. 
Mnicovor. it gljries in tho r»'» Hiiion 
of tiein*: more Dritish lha ■ t.-dn. 
and re:\liz''fl that if Chicago. ;• '-ro- 

.«cn e<l ;>y its Mavor, 1:^ nn‘vi-l-iriti.<h. it 
I 'inli-.\u.urnUan. I’Ddor Iho cinuin- 
s in i*;i. why should /.ustialia I uy 
fr r.i Chlca'^ when h'.ndieds of cem- 
]‘ M'mi*.? arc- knoehine nt her liiwrs 
T!;. - i.M something which will not 
t' ituih Hill, unless it Jiffccts the Htl- 
1* Is ;. .Ngutn^ It he wVl l*.alance th** 
I dution of the llnlo-Aincrican Na- 
t id I’ri'.'n. which declares tr.at Su- 
1 , ’!i luleiit McAiidrew’.s pro-I-iriMsh 

1 ' . lo.dng the friendship 

I -i*in po'rl-'.: of Cen’ctil nnd 
; 'h . 1 . nnd will got City 

; l’e-k-4 til d'maud iiic ic.s’g- 

» i n or .\=.-'th‘r sihoiil othcinl with 

. \n :h -.‘'jw-n name. Put it utiiht 

I :•;** - t.'V Ch'i'aito businc.**:*. 

re a-'e i’.“nv Dritish l>om‘.nion-. 
p-:-?trlM'-’' ;.n i Ihev buv heavily. 


l>ovclopi..en* of the "International 
Mind,’’ deccrilx'd by Klihit Root ns the 
•Tndi.^pen.sablc rrei*cquiaite of a Dnsl- 
Ing reace." to combat the slandurdlz- 
ation Uiat "threatens to redmo i><r- 
nonalitios to n common type." was 
urged by lion. Vincent MHa.sey, (’ana- 
iliiiu mlniatcr to the ITnited States, in 
addressing the Fnglish-Spi'aklng 
Dnton of the Ignited States at a din¬ 
ner given in his honor in Mow York. 

The Canadian minister deseribetl 
the "Inteinatlonal Mind” as tho mind 
that, with a firm belief in its own 
country, can project It.self into the 
problems of its neighbors and see and 
understand their point »)f view. 

Describing international concord ns 
essentially a thing of the mind nnd 
the i-pirlt. Mr. Massey sugpsated the 
substitution of the phra.se "Mirds 
Across the Sea" for the ))hraao 
"Hands Across the Sea" often heard 
in reference to the relalloug between 
the Ignited States and Great IJrlut^n. 

Mr Massey referred to the Cana- 
dian-American ix'undary as "the per- 
peiuil svmibol of i>oace’’ between the 
Hriti.sh cemmomvoalUi and Uie United 


Out On Location 


Australian Hii^hman Thmigtit l^tlile- 
lieni U'uH 111 llouveii 
At a dinner given In hia honor re¬ 
cently. Sir Granville Ilyrle. Austra¬ 
lia’s new High Commissioner, told 
this amusing tale. On one occasion 
Sir Granville was exchanging war¬ 
time reminiscences with a bushman. 
and montionedz the fact that he had 
been In Bethlehem. "Go’hlimey," said 
the backw’ood.sman In nn awed voice, 
"was you In Bethlehem?" "Yes, I 
was." repeated the commissioner. 
"Gee." said the other. "I always 
thought Bethlehem was in heaven." 


Mvm!'! Quite Modern 


Tondcti < rov.d flonost the other end of the line 

A testim.m al to the h^'n-sty of the jg wilUngdon, namp<i in honor of the 
nveraec Ixmiinn rpov/d was furnished present Governor-General. 

when a mnn threw a brick into a _ . .. ___ 

jewoior’s window in Eudgate Hill and Bill—"You have heard our cuspen 

seized a tray containing trinkets of dor song?" 

the value of CTOO. Tlie jewellery was Pete—"No. How does It go?” 
scattered all over the roadway and Bill "It all depends on you.” 

sidewalk, but a member of the firm ; — • --- 

told the police magistrate that they A man Is seldom justified In going 
sustained no loss on this account oa to law unless he has more money than 
the crowd picked up everything nnd he needs. 

returned It in a very short time. --- 

----* Fish eyes are considered a great 

The harder It rains the more soft jeUt'acy in the West Indies and East- 
water wo get. era Asia. 


No Authentic Record To Decid© 
OlHciiHsion In England 

Spirited dlscuHsIons ns to the old- 
e.st family in England are taking 
place In that country, but Giere is 
no authentic record, apparenlly. of 
which family has that honor. One 
authority gives the palm to Bie (’or- 
bet. in Shropshire, though even the 
Corbels would hardly claim that ex¬ 
treme antiquity suggested by Iho 
motto of a certain Spanish family, 
part of which runs, "Before the gods 
were gods, the Velascos were Valaa- 
cos." 

There was a Count Dohna in Ger¬ 
many who told the emperor on one 
occasion that the Dohnas were the 
most illustrious nobility when the 
HohenzoUerna were nothing. In 
England there was the famous pas¬ 
sage in the House of Lords b(tween 
the Howards and the Spencers in 
1621. "My lord,” said the Earl of 
Arundel, "when these things were 
doing your ancestors were kcq|>ing 
sheep." Spencer was equal to the 
occasion: "My lord, when my ances¬ 
tors were keeping sheep your lord¬ 
ship’s ancestors were plotting trea¬ 
son." 


Gets Application In Early' 

\V. O. Tucl>fart)cr. of Olathe, Kan¬ 
sas, for 22 years a railway mall clerk, 
believes so strongly in the future of 
aviation, that he has applied for ap¬ 
pointment as air mail clerk when the 
time comes when nir mail will be as- 
sortod en route. Postal officials say 
the day probably is only a year or 
two away. 


CHStle I'f GIinuning»*h\.‘i», one 
‘.. 1 C it:i(! iiKjs! interesting edi- 

fi .-s of i: : kina ::i SWv-tlfn The In- 
U ; 1* I t)f tliis .■;nc;''nl slronghvi’d of 
[‘.v.Mxiish nobility, rearing its forbid- 
fii*.”, cranite walls abf)ve the fertile 
p'ahi: of Ihf province of Scania, in 
Ih- stjuth of Sweden, shows that the 
l:nt*;h*''. f‘f oM were far from Spar¬ 
tan in the.'r habit;<. 

The kitchen, fur inslance. was 
fi'.irul to li' appoUitiHl after oln*.o£t 
[imlern willi a giant baking 

u\»n, tM-iks for running water, 
ibainr-gv pljcs i;i the w'allj, tw’o huge 


A Made Over Elephant 


Evlilbit At BritUh Natural lIlMtory! 
>luHcum Reduced In 8lz© 

After "treatment" extending over | 
seven months, during which it baa 
been remodcUe<i and reduced to more 
normal proportions, the African ele¬ 
phant belonging to the South Ken¬ 
sington Natural History Museum has 
returned to its old quarters. 

It was taken back on a theatrical 
scenery van, and because of Its size, 
the woodwork of the doors Into the 
great hall of the mu.Heum had to be 
remove<l, 

"It was a task to get it in and out 
of our studios, which are especially 
built," said a representative of 
Messrs. Rowland Ward, Ltd., of Pic- 
catlllly, who carried out the work. 

When the animal was first mounted 
in the museum it stood over 11 feet 
in height and, as posed, looked a vciy 
ferocious creature. It is now about 10 
feet 7 inches in height, and In its "re¬ 
juvenated" form looks more like an 
African elephant. 


Victoria and Vancouver Mecca for Tourists 


The iiLiMt 1 ■-•markable discovi^ry. 
hfM'vrr. vva:^ a central h‘atirig in- 
rtullalion with long pipes thi*ough 
the walls tcmlucting Uu- h; at fiom 
the main Ixjiler in the kitenen to 
till* varu'us apartments on Ihe upj)cr 
.slnneo. On the second floor, iimr-e- 
(balcly above the big hearth in the 
ki'chen. a .'nug and vsann "cozy cor¬ 
ner* with stone leats had been ar- 
rtmged. 


Canada Has Wise Policy 
There are people who complain bit¬ 
terly at times because we have a 
closcd-up Sunday in this land; they 
say there la no amusement, no place 
to go. nothing to do. They want 
some entertainment to keep ’Jie week¬ 
end from being dull. Chicago probably 
felt the some way about it years ago 
and gave way to the desire. Today 
they have It to the limit, but the ex¬ 
citement they wanted has turned cut 
to be a wild horse that took the bit in 
Its teeth; its mouth is hard now and 
refuses to feel the urge that is at 
times put upon the rein. Don't hurry 
up with an agitation for an open Sun¬ 
day. 


Britaiiniu N rhirt\-Five \ eui*^ Old 
.'ixul Sailed H19 Tinu'X 
The ICing’.s .'iffection for his famous 
yacht Dntannia was alluded to by 
Major I'hillip Mumloke at the I..rndon 
ITosa i’lub’.H "Hcafariitg night" dinner 
recently. Major Hunloke. who has 
Haded Hrilanniu for the King since 
Hi.: .Mii^esty came to the tlin)ne. said: 

);!y lovf.-; a ship as His Majcjity 
!• \c;; Britannia. T df^u’it if he will ever 
gel rid of her. The King, too. hke? a 
\r.'jht in which he can take a large 
r-.umber of jm:. ;t i. and this Britannia 
doc.i. To build n ma-.- l)oat like Bri- 
tniiTi'H would n')w coat something like 
11 . 1000 . alihough die wan built for 
fdooo. iiritanniH is ycar« old, has 
^.illcd 310 tinica, and won 187 first 
uu I 61 other prizes. 


^40*4/f/W dioof^ All h/tHTer^ 


7?/£ 1/OV^ 


^ancquVe/^ 


A Christmas rose plucked in the 
garden is no novelty in the flower 
vase of a Victoria or Vancouver auto¬ 
mobile. for the climate of these two 
British Columbia cities Is-so mild dur¬ 
ing the winter that both claim eter¬ 
nal summer. The golfer can drive, ap¬ 
proach the green, putt on u real gniss 
green practically every day m the 
year, and hundred.s of miles of splen¬ 
did roads are in first clas.s conaiUon 
the year round for molonrrr. The 
mild climate Is largely due to the 
warming influence of the Japan cur¬ 
rent and protecting range of moun¬ 
tains. 

Victoria, t apital of British (!olum- 
bia. is a city of rare charm with its 
IjoauLifii! d»ivc‘3 and residential sec¬ 
tions. Its first cla.ss goif coiU;i''s to 
whwh access is easily obtained by the 
player, its unique Chinese quarter, its 
turbfincd Hindus, its ivy-coverod Em¬ 
press Hotel and its imijo.sing farlla- 
ment buildings. Bo h the Victoria 
Golf Club and Ihe Colw* nd f'.olf r.nd 
Country Club have entertaine I thc-u- 
sands of guent.s iu n single year, and 
gf)Uer8 stopp’.n'.? ai the Emprr u may 
I)’ay at both up .a payu.'Ut of u small 
fjreeus' fee. Vii toi ia i;: noted lor its 
magniticeat drives Ituding tui.aigh 
beautiful atreets. along the ocesu's 
T^hoie j and far into the interior of the 
tolund. 

Victoria 1:? at th s*jufheru lip of 
Vancouver island, nam'li alter C np- 
,tain George V’ancouver, of th tUiHsh 
j Navy, who discove.ed it in 17t‘2. Us 


Says Skj»< rupers Not Durable 
American skyscrapers, it allowed to 
stand more than 40 years, will cer¬ 
tainly tumble down, says Sir Edwin 
Lutyens, British architect. He says 
the mothoda. employed in structural 

tlic steel 


Why Uo Wc Hurry 
Kirogluk, picture.sque Eskimo, 
his first visit to New Y'ork, nek 
natural but somewhat utagge 
question: 

"Why does everyone hurry so 
Come to think of it 


steel construction of givln 
only a "coaling of paint or one of 
mud and water" offer the chief (lun¬ 
ger. as they give little protection from 
atmospheric penetration. 


Woman H**atls Senate 
The first woman Presiuent ot a 
Rrniite in tho world ha; been ins*idled 
nt Vienna. Frau 01:.n flud'd-Zvynek 
took her seat a.s Pro lident of the Up- 
p'T House of the .Austrian Goverfi- 
ment. This bc.;rovvHl of dignity is cen- 
ridercil remarkable there Aus¬ 

tria gave women political right-, only 
tea years ago. 


trees, among them the stately Doug- couver, and an Indian legend has it 
las hr which tow'crs 300 feet above that as long as the "Two Sisteis" 
the loads over w'hich the traveller stand guard over Vancouver, just so 
gUde.s, are magnitlcent, sbixie c.f them long will Canada's greatest Pacific 
being C or 7 feet in diameter. Cen- port thrive and develop, 
tury-old cedars and gnarled oaks of Victoria is the site of the Cr)'i«tal 
great age are conspicuous fealuxes Cardens, eroded several year.i ago by 
of the landscape, and mile.s ul gorse, the Canadian Pacific Hallway nnd 
or Hootch broom, line the hikhwavs. W'hlch have become the social cerflio 
Like Victoria, Vancouver has, been ' of the city. The gardens are equipped 
a wcn lerful road l>uilder am! has • with a magnificent 150-foot swim- 
liundrodH of miles of splendid uulo- \ ming pool, completely covered by a 
mobtU. loads of the finest inaca'lam. catiopy of glass. Here tho inhabitants 
Vuriccuver is suirounded by U'wer- of Victoria and visitors flock in thou- 
ing mountains and the famous sands to enjoy the sports facllicies of 
•’Lions" twin .snow-capned peaks. Uhe institution. Dancine and other 


why Ir.deed? 
The world offers many ex.amples of 
people who are both leisurely and 
successful. They seem to get out of 
life quite as much happiness as do 
th'>8e who are always rushing. 

l^erhaps the sage who said, "The 
more haste, the less speed," reveal¬ 
ed a truth we could all wlseiy pon¬ 
der. 


About lh*j tlilnv u %.'oin:u’. 

cun do when Iut hudiiiut's nam** is 
nieiuioiM-d 1.S to sgli, lu)k rvsiKued 
say noihinx- 


He: "1 live In the country now. It's 
t«u ribly Inconvenient." 

She: "It must be. What tlo you 
miss inoBi?" 

He: "Tho last train." 


Women cf rkigland are buying more 
©xp'‘ntlve wealing apparel ih;in in 
(orin<*r seasons. 


"U is a finu thing that we three are 
imiirying thnte sisters." 

"How HU?" 

"Wo shall uuiy have omj mother lo- 
law lHiwo«*n us,"—Buon Humor. Ma¬ 
drid 


Tribes of Interior Brazil Imve u 
mania for laying curses on their 
neighbors. 










I 


TriR alta. 


PAINTED ^<IRES 

BY NELLIE L. McCLUNG 

'copyright, CANADA, 1925 

( HAPTKU X\ . Conlin'inJ iformlty, cvoti ns tho siinshlnt! v.'urmrU 
Htlml was awnktncil next mornfnj? i ^ aj^ain the laded patto.n nn the 
hy Ihn fiist beam of the Mnivh eon. **^*^l'’ quilt, falsely called a 

It eumo around tho corner of the which lay on the 1»ottom 


factory cotton blind, and playi'<l over, Melml’a bed was a nar- 

hci pillow with a tromuloiiV motion. *'**''' white onamcHcit one, wMh so 
It was a jolly little sunbeam that; enamel pone that lu 

H» <*mod to have a story to tell If there was now that of on Knp- 

v.n;t anyone to listen. Hut iielmrs ***^** '^^^'*^*'''*^^’ Pf>ur was uneven 

nenit was too ftill of Its own hnppt-, splintery; a cracked badn rtoml 
ne.sa to H.stcn to any other story, t'he ' covered with red and yellow 

spranp f^ut of !)cd :ind met the now *'**'''*^^^'* '>tit today nothinR 

(lay with a soup, n rtranpc sonp, tunl for Ilolmra heart was sinp- 

camr Inibblinp out of her lar-off sonp. She went down the 

childhood. Helmi luu! not thoupht of »l«<r8 to the hip kitcln n I)e- 

it since she enmo to (Janadn, and dld ,*^"’’ "'*'*^*’*^ axsolcmn black stove, 
not know tlmt she know it. but to- told on its fowr 


LKSON^^o. 15 

Question: Why is 
emulsified cod-liver oil 
so imporlant as an added 
ration with milk in the 
diet of children? 

Answer: Because when 
it is mixed with milk it 
makes milk a more effi¬ 
cient rickets-preventing 
food and builder of strong 
bones. Children like it 
best in the form of 

SCOTT'S EMOLSION 






P. O. WoB eot. VIoterla, B. C. 


Little Helps For This Week 


she was of bar sister’s maniapo and 
lici nlackl acccntancc of her ravarm- 


lici placid acceptance of her swarm- over. She was plud of he tinned Impulsively and i<Kk her lyinjf f,jU lenpth with food and lup- 

inp family. Ihit now Ilelmi had a chnnee to sleep in peace, and the hand.‘ ilclmi liaa worked her last day beside him Klevcn collins were 

deeper uiulcrstandlnp. «o she sung;undulallnp snores which Tor you, Mrs. McMann. for todxy she ; ff,|,ji(l Imllarly hlled 

the old chant, the "Kalcvala'* of her Trom her room adjoining the Is goinp to marry me. if she will.' Home two years*apo a vessel be 

NOW u.neoonw To.- ...n- ^ 

• • ..... ._i ® Jiois. ' M.... i.t....iv ..» i._ __I .• >1 


(To Bo (.%mtimied.) 


Vigilance Needed To New Northern Manitoba Map 

Keep Undesirables Out ..„7 . 

__ Kiln Mon f^nkn Area Mapped ||y 

Many Uuys Tried To Hmiiggle Them ! Topogrnphlml Depiii tinent 

Info Kiipland | The Topographical Survey, Depart-1 

The Ilritlsh Secret Service depart- Interior has just issued' 

merit In kept ever busy and ever vigil- Cormorant I.nke sheet of Uie Na- ^ 
fint. In prcvcntlnpr hlnck linted umlc- 1 Topoffraphlcal aeries on a renle ; r„r m,,., 
slrnhlcs from landing in Cfrcat Bri-1 miles to nn inch. This sheet niodatlon To Suit All Pockets. 1 ha 

lain. I *8 ^ provisional scries map v. iUioiit Karniera’ Holiday Playgroun(l. 

Valiere, n French communtst who' ^ Is plotted from a(.*rlal 

Is on the Home onice Black List, and taken by tho Hoyal Victoria and Island Publicity Bureau 

who had already been turm d back P'^^cc. During the (OeorRo r. Warren, Commissioner) 

'when he tried to land in Bngland, flights Dominion Lard, Q- Wqb bob, viotor ia, b. c. 

! was recently arrested in Ixmdon. It ^“*'VoyorH acted as navigatlonol <-fll- i 

' was found that he had landed from a' '^***'’ *"'‘P obtaired ~ ~ ~ 

sailing iKiat on the beach near I’olk- Topographical Little HelpS For THis Wcek 

stone, .says a writer in Pearson’s Survey at Ottawa for the nominal_ 

Weekly. price of twenty-live cents each or “ 

I Uer enlly Mr. Rurnett. the chief Im-: form cr printed jk. huniil- 

1 migration omcer. received informa- . 

I Hon from an agent that a number of shown on this map lies i The bird that soars on highest wing 

I Chinamen wmre to be amiiggled into ""‘■*** "f Manitoba and ex-‘ groumJ her lowly 

iKngland in the liner President Lin-, ! And she that doth most sweetlv sir r 

!coln. In consequence, the vessel was Saskatchewan. It lies Imj-I Slng.s in the shade wlicn all things 

'mot at Hawaii and carefully search- lulitudcs 5*1 degrees and fif) de-■ rest; 

:cd. but nothing could be found. logiUules 100 degrees ^ud an(l ^-e „eo 

; The men were on the point of kK- '« »'.Vlc to ame^MrtLnerv 

'ing up when one of the ectrclmrs ’ ^l.e Pan eheot on the south «n,l We- „ ,,.JZT ' . 

chance,! ,o hnmp Into one of u row of huL hv finl Z.ZT''? 

lofconins In the hold and knocked the "'""’''' f-'ormorant lake clothes hjlife ^ Ph h *” ^ ^ ® 

lying full length, with food and lug- 'lowly in heart and il l” T' '’ 

gage beside him. Klevcn collins were '■'O'" l''« ' cmslfng dim ^f 

some two years'ago, a vessel, he- “y Athapapuskow I.ake. Klin- ^ ^ 

llcveil to l)c carrying CTtlnose Iniml- *''™ I.ake, Schist I.ake, .Kilo Lake. 

! grants, was chased by a patrol boat T''® n"hi >g f.cUls 

and apparently bctr.aycd her Fuilt by >»‘iy be reached from The Kas by/fHQIJC A MHC AC lyinTUppC 
making ulT at top speed. Night fell, to Sturgeon Landing, thence Y' * 


.lav It eame unbidden. Sis monlhs ago , h-Kcd Iter, She had her || bUU M 6 tlyiyLblUN | ' Td “gTouldTe^Zt^r"’’' 

or le.ss lletmi would have Hlt-t niy , I----- , The men were on the nolnl of glv- 

frowned on the old I.'innl.sh song with; t - ‘"K «"<' “f «o'fchers 

its old wori I ethics and customs. She | ^**“”* i ailed forehanded .-the wao l\- ton. not one; but I know u girl in chanced to bump Into one of a row 
wonl.l have boon ns scornful of It «« I Hmt I think a lot of." |„f Sonins In the hold and knocked the 

she was of hop si.slor'H mariiaRO and usually Hlopt until IlcImi wn.*! p.aasing behind him. and ^ inahjo was a young Chinaman 


1 I 1 C 4 IVIIIK at iwji ruieeu. .>i>iUL iim. IICP fcI/\ iXfrtinrfc aanwcv/^vmtn 

^ but still the patrol l>oat .rung on. ami ’’y " " *>■« Athap.apus-. NO OTHER IVIEOltlNE 


Are Near-Sighted 


at lasi caught up with the \e 8 sol end Horn which canoe rotilcs 


lead in numerous direction.^. Tho 


From mv falhoi’s golden ibeoido i at ‘ xr xr i r .t , , - making off at top speed. Night fell. x.auu.uH. 

I'Vom n,y broth’er s weleou.c ' ”r m-cf dc"culed to tlT" ' " '^''y 'u 

hearthstones. ' A,- N C Ur j at lasi caught up with the vessel end f™m which canoe routes 

,. .11 It the breakfast tabic. Thoia-; Are Near-Sighted hoardid hor numerous direction.^. Tho 

‘ '''® H was as good Atamly Mine produced some very rich 

«T’ I a time as any. Sho arose iw aoon as, tO>onrd and the patrol prnt 

''“I'l aolcmii aiitl dol ■fill, ii'.tvty hLc awnko. combed back hor ihin hair, “ *' *•*** Oploiii.-iiisi forced i cIuctanMv to Id and rail to the smolt(?r in Hri- 

wi'li jcars and tho hoort-throbs of an-! speared It into a llgurc eight at the Noaralghtodness. or myopia. the oilier vessel go In port one of the <’olumbia. Important develop¬ 
'd luu\ goncratlou, tho -Kalcvala’’ had Lack of her head with a few iron hair- widely prevalent among the human__ a «^n_i .. monts arc now taking nlac(» at .several 


Haby's Own Tablets Arc the 
Ideal Remedy For Babies 

and Young Children 
i'aiiadian mothers arc noted for 


crew got drunk, and talked. Hh, btu.y "O"' t'^Wng place ol .sc^cral g ve U.e^r hitle ones 


. .. place in this new we ld ..f ..ctUm pLis, put on her best bl.u k salctn '''® »'‘‘PP®r ^ m. 8 lv gi.nrded nndX^ moihef 1 ^“ : 

and .cubtlos. , , dress which was bcghmlng to "get pletoly ccasc.l being a lish, it wa.s as- ^ deposits of the Khn-Klon p.operty, ways o.. the lookout tor a .e.ncdv 

But Helmi sang on a:T she got to lit too .snug,” and came into the sorted by Dr. Kugenc (I. Wiseman of jj^c-bar to the legs of each of twenty- consklerable ns- which is cdlicient and at the :mmo 


dresLcd. in a iiiecha?iical. toneless kitchen. 


Buffalo. Fhairman of the American 


seven w 


•rntchpft vAnnA.v tiiAn rnd Puni^ sl.stunce lo iho.sc interested in dcvcl- 8L8‘*Ldoly safe. Thou.sands of 

.rctcncd yeiio\c men and i.un..,- » , , ^ * .motliers have found such a remedv 

rc.hoa.d, f'"-"'®'- ProfP®®t- in IJaby's Own Tablets mnl many of 

^“tT- them use nothing else for the ail- 


' Du not harm the bride of heaven, j 
Do not injure licr thou lovcJt; 
<’oun!K*l wiMi the bride of licaven. 
To tho young wife give Instruc¬ 
tion.” 

Helmi rolluU up (hu i-uLtoii blind 


Agricultural Research i ^ 

Women In Work At (jeneva 

Faiiada Ahead Of Oilier l*a»*lr* Ol ’* 

llrnpl.-,- In Ih'lving hit.. I■..r.., '’'^y ''"Portant Part In Disar.nnmcnt 

l»robl(*ins I Negotiations Of League 

_ ' Woim-ii arc layipng a sUmiu, l td; 

A wuio.^pread development in ii.qri- luiporlant pan in the diMivuni'iifiit 
cultural research is looked for in the got in (ions under (he auspiei*.* of the 

near Intuie by Dr. J. II. Grisdulo. *'***^^^^'‘ '>f Niillons. 
deputy minister of agricultMio, who Muie. Maxim I.itvinoff, iho [in tty 

wim n (’iiniidinii <i(>1i'frAto iil iTif» Imy- ami chutiulug N\lfe Of tlie C;hi«-f ot thc 


— ments of tlieir little one.s. Among 

tt; I \ir I »4 o Bu'ui hs Mrs. Howard King, of Truro, 

Women In Work At Leneva N.S., who says: “i can strongly 

-- recommend Baby’s Own Tablc'm to 

Play Important Part In Oisar.nnment tdolher.s of young children as I know 
Negotiations Of League 

Women are layipng a sH.-nl. Tut; Bahy’.s Own TubUds are nold by 
iiuporlant pan In the dij-uinui'iieiu 


voice. lmltntmgthcoldmlnat.rcl\^bcm| Helmi was carrying back the empty Academy of Optometry, w’hicli held overboard opnu'nt work or in further prospect-' j 

she had heard sing it years ago - porridge Ixiwls. ^ , its annual convention at the hotel Ing. then 

laughing at it, yet bound by itsi “W’by, look wlio’s here.” said Jmk Benn.sylvania. New York. ' * ^ _ men 

strange tjpill. She was glad she jc- Boran when she entered the dining- ”Wo have found,” I>r. Wiseman Agricultural Research ^ I W L A* P 

metnjwicd it; it would mn’uo .lark'room. "Good-inorning. Mr-t. Me- said, '’that a groat proiwrlion of ccvs- ' omen In WoiK At Ueneva N.S. 

Doran laugh that big rolling laugh Maun, aie yon njt slo^'ping well rs of myopia are caused by tuo fact ^ Ahead Of Oilier Pa^i^ *** pi t t p » 1 n moll 

slic loved so Wf ll. He would s.ay again, now?” Jack sometimes ciiolvi'd his that the eyes naturally diverge lo the l.mpire lu Delving Into l■arm of r 

You arc a queer stick, Helmi." | o\N*n breakfast, but this nioraing lie right and to the left inslea.l of look- l*robl(*ins I *?”*, ® 8 gue ones 

Du not harm the bride of heaven, xt^kt *^11 ” 1 *^ ^ ' u ica . jc imor mi.s- a wide incid dovelonment in aeri bupurlant pari in the iliMiiniii'iieiit med 

Do ...,t h.j,.r., I.V.- thou lovcst; . "‘f.'®''-_ ^ >“ “« ‘‘y®’ '®y‘ne to . orrect n. K..ti.,ll„.,s u...!...- (!.,• ..uspi,.,.,. ,.f tl..., '-ent 

tlo..”’^ «.fv fc.\. buRiness, but 1 Ciuit help hothcrl..- jecUa lo .i strain which produces ‘'®P“'y ■ninislcr of aRrlc.ihM.o, who M.ixlm Luc inoR, H'f 

.about other people.” ncar-Hightrdnesa. ® fanudian dulogalc at the Im- (hauaiug wife of the chi.f ol tho. 

IRlinl rolluU up Ihu loll,,,, blind, McMaiin had thoii^ht out a ‘T'risniatic lenses have .low been P'®*'*' ARrlruUiiral Uescarch <'oiifcr- * d'I, g.il Ion, Is an I.iikHsIi phi, 

and ticl the red coni in a Iww-Unot.! .e,,, p,,an. deep laid, darin? Vvlrcme developed which rc.storc this paial- ®''®® ''®''* "• I-<'n'ion, Knglaiul, recont- ^ "" Z " " i I 

I'h.. warn. .Mn.ch son was tlllinf; the: ..\vhy tothe. ?•• asked .lark, hch.in't; they allow the eyes to re- ‘ontv.enoe, JI.-. .Iris- ® ' ' A 

” *b*‘5.v, c.tn to a piece of toast from the main m their natural, wligntly diver- 11 was lounci mat . the 

I riKhlenlUir Iho wealhor-bealen lillle py,.,,n„,i whU-h llolnn had j.ist Kent, position. Many cases of myopia "'1'® ™"'® if-ftirch hi farming ' |® Mu-soo^, tos fro... U.irs.un im.. 

housc.s. tJtrciu.icis of lose and oiungc bro.iBht in. have been reduced and many otlm.s PrcbleniH than any other section of f-.iKlLsh. was Miss hy how, of l.,m,l.,ii, 


dale declared, It was found that Cnn- '^“oiT, who iran.<lat< ■; the dofum-nt.s 
ada did moio rc.'^oarch lu farming Mtisvo. iti's from Ull^^!an into 

prcblenis than any other erection ot LuKHsh. was Miss Ivy Unw, <if l.ondiai, 


medh ino dealers or by mall at 25 
cents a box irom ’rUe Dr. Williams' 
Medicine Co., Rrockvillo, Out. 

Canadian Bacon Market 

f-'arniers Should .X'ut shu‘h'‘ii Hog 
ProdiK'tion At llie ITrvmt 'Iline 
An optimistic note with regard to 
the market for t'anadiiui baeoa was 
struck hy A. .1. Milks, representative 


Wore tjirowa into th'» upper ht‘a\ons. 
mdicating a windy ilay; uuUng 
smoko climbed up its stairi;.;s wav. 
failhriilly trlling who was mrl vho 
wiv: not astir. To .lack Doran’s h(»usc 
on tiic iiiU. faintly pink m the ii.oin- 
ing I'S'ht, Ilclmi’s eyes luinxl h.vmg- 


’ I auppo.sc H person get.s no tlmnka. L^vc been entirely cured oy thlb sim-' Lrnpiro, and that 


but I was never one to look lor method.’’ 


llianks.” Mrs. MfManii was 


Miuiy lower animuLs such 


self-righteous mood which ttio Ponid- ^ects and birds, Dr. Wiseman said, 


peels, namely in grain 
and in the control of b 
losis, the Dominion wa’^ 
the world. 


nner ^lecnon m . 7 ' ,,.! of tho British Ministry of Food in 

in Momo rm- lit*’ daughter of Sir SldiU'V Hou. Slit* , 

m somo us- . , , , conforenro with packers at Toicnto. 

in riur rcsciich Known In literary dreh-.s a.s li e an ,, , 

m rust u staun ^ He expro.s.sed the conviction that 

1k)vIiio 1 1 'll- tiiOi of ii of ll 0 ^ clrt. % • f ^ 

iK)\ine iiuxuu . ..it i i . . ir C anadian farmers wotdd be verv 

.‘IS Well ahead of Mjiic. .Anatolc Lunacharsky, ilt>- wl.*' i' i i , , . • , 


,1 1 . . 1 I . 4 .1 .. poorly advi.scd to slacken in hog pro- 

the world ‘b anotlur lUi.-^jdan dclegat*', tlio so- . ^ ^ , * 

“ ' , . .,,.,.4 _ , T,. .. , duction at the jiresent lime, statiiig 

Olio of nio^l inif>ortnift vli't •Vliiilstt r of 1 uIjIh* IfOiii ilc'lioUi id .. . , 

IJUC Ol inc most, impnriniw rt. uns . , . , . an improvement in the British 

of the attendance of the Fan idian c» h biated .actress, slie appears on . , . . .. 


g coni. lu man's develop-'‘i®'®K“^®® ®>*® “®ccptun:o of ..n '1'" Momlw sLic-a- lt,'7.>-.i,.I. M. I.uu^ 

lie lower species, l.e cm- I" visit this cou.)ti-y on ll.e acl.a...k> l.iis w.• I.,... a mm.l.c- of 

hn.i ikr-wi t.iiiv n4-.rro Boyd OiT. Abovdccn, l‘lu>s ill VSIdch ills wife ha^ taken ih** 


M..L umi,. lo .lacK ijomns nousc ^rs knew so well. have vision incomjvaiably ktener V. . . ., \ .. 

on tl.c Hill, fai.itly pink ... ihe mo...-, Doran went ...cr.ilv on .Tell of man. Kor ex.in.plc, he ‘>“® of the n.ost impnrta.it results '‘‘‘t -'<‘'>1''' ® of 1 ..Idi.^ Imur.iciion. is 

...g I s'l.t, IIeI...l's eyes tun. si lovu.g- j.„„r tro..b!es. Mrs. McMam." he -toid, to thc mosquito, man glowed, of the attend,mce of the Kan idian c icb.alcl actress, si.,• appears on 
Iv. and as she w„t<l,...l ll„. li..st fe-ilh-' ■■b„„ulers arc human Let us .'d- 1“®® a burning coaL In man's develop- dvlogalcs wa.s U.o acceptunco of ..n slac- a- It.o.enel. M. I.un^ 

< r of smeke driltcd aimlessly up into' y„„ .. ' „,e,.t Lorn the lower species, l.e c..- invit.ition to visit this counti-y on ll.e ael.a...k> l.as w .- I.en a mm.l.c of 

'.be waitng air. Home day lb/,t IHlle! jj..r McMann saw .she ba.l the at- tinued, the eyes had gradm.llv come 1’'®®' I^®' ''ot®'® Hoj'd Orr, Abeidcen, l'l‘ 0 's in « .lei. 1,1s wife has taken ,1.- 

t,o...se would be her., and she would „,R „,ble. The ,in.e w. s to the f.ont from their position at the i®®'® of the gre,.test research workers h'adlng role. , , . . 

have he ow., little pots an l P'ms.' aide of the head, as in the f.sh, and "’® ®‘®''‘® i'kH'stvy of th-s world. Amerlcau wom.mhoo.i steps in.o il.e 

sTiiii ti'T' iiivif IiUt> ..It* Dr (_JiT will (‘omc lu C'aiiada ii(-xt plctnii,* vhi*n U cDincs to ^ ulUil von 

jusL ukc HUwi. . • Well, sec n’ as vouTc so anxious with this had come a grcai improve- c^aiuum ncxi , , 

riilmi’s lii'h* bi'irf Mim r th,. /,».i . an.Mous , , . - . October Di (Srisdale sjiid RiTiisrorff. lnad of tlio iicrmaii (hit 

iiiiims ugn- lu.iu satig tuc <‘‘d; p^ar my 1 roubles. Jack I will trll parallel vision of both t-yes. »-^( looi i, i.a. v.iisti.iic smu. . . 

inolodv of lovi* atiil injUiiur Init ilio' • « ’ .isi«i i * i i ~ u -■ i gallon, lln* ( (juntcs.s was AIl^'s JcjiiiiU’ 

luciuuy ui lUM aim malm^. inu iiic Hhould know becaaso Ibis gave man a triangulating, , , . v. , i ..i i 

woni.s, which never nmttei vl much',.. tt. ' ... ..n.o i One (Yop Pays For Farm LucUem.v .r, of N. vv \oik. :dm is now 


marlcct was in sight, with many of 
thc ((miiLrics which had been Hooding 
Britain with bacon during tho jnast 
year being practically out of fhe 
buEinesH. 


M.u. u -4 UKC MOVOI. . anxious wltli this had come a grcai improve- ul.m 

ru iml.s light htarL satig thc ^ ! to hear my 1 roubles. Jack. I will Iril *uent parallel vision of both eyes. ;Octobci, Dx. (nisdale said, 

melody of low and maluig. but the y^,^ should know. because ''This gave man a Iriangidaling, ! ^ 

uuni.H, which never matter ’d you’re the cause. I hear fro.n a filend mechanism by which ho could judge ’ 

a„yw,iy, were Ihe disnml lin-s of ,he|„f j.;dmonto., limt you .ire en- distunces, and w.ns of great value to ' ®«‘'®‘>®|»®®® ®®oi> k®®®'®®' ‘ ''‘I-'®'®'' 

Italevala. " lloweve.-, sung rs It.ey 1 „„r ' uim," s.ud Dr. M iseman. I"’® f"' I"® "‘®'’^ 


,, . T- 1 I f .1 4- II Time lias Test(d It. Dr. Thomas 

Ib rnsiorg. Iiend of tl.o del. ,,,, 

gation. The (’ountes.s was Mls.s Jeanne ket upwards of lifty years and in that 
LucUeiui ver, of New Volk. She is now Lime It has proved a blessing t(j Ihou- 

:it (bueva w ith lu r liusbaiid nnd is It Ks in high favor Ihroiighout 

. . ... 4 . . t’aiiuda ami Us excellcm c has carried 


were hy her In ragLime, no trace y 

the gloom wa.s left. 0 . 


■(’ill a rral up(»n tin mouui-.iin, 
Dr a willow in the vxill-’y.q 
Hide it nndornenth tliy Uiiatl" 
'I'hat llio stranger may not 
it;' 


.4 1 ton uivu >ou are cn . fa paying the full cost on the farm inieresle.l, bko Aiiu ileans generally 14 . l.ovond the s»-• if it wor., 

gtigcd to a girl there and nil this him, mud I>i. Wiseman. 1 1 .r & 1 . n .1 i> i«tmc uc>onu me .st.... ji u. were 

I • • . 1 , , ' ' <‘n .♦ .YMI...- 0 IU- mm nr. ■ which it was grown, is reported »>’'•. iu ulie outeouu- of tie dlsarma- double the price it would be a (heap 

linio von are strinirin H(?imv jiiorp^ But naturally this roco.atlv ac- f ^ i , ,, . .* * ^ 

. - y I i \ ■ 1 I 1 • J .rv li'® local olhees of the »Sol.liers’ au nt problem. liniiiunt. 

just for your own an,uso,..c..t-build- 1 ®l.® .'.'rtb.®,ocuI,u Single V. ion pos. es- The fanner eon- - 

... this house and all, and givi.,' us -seJ the inco nplctcness of ...osl ncv. eradi. ate, Worth a .Mlili,,., 

a I to ,,.,der«t..n, yo,. ...ean to do the ; ..... , ' Alta, and his experience see.ns to be J^®®®''®®''® "i'l Ri.v tho,.sand fox pelts f,on, ^ .....,us 


right thing by Ilelinl.” j Dr. W’i.'iemau said that myopia wius 

J,iek stop],ed eating and looked up' >n®®''‘®®'l®>B because inode.n civlliza 
in surprise. Dill Larsen cut l.U n.oull, i t®®®®®®®®*^'*'-®®! “I®®®®® appH®;®'io:i, as 


Helmi laughed at Ihe coiiciH iindiuc- in iuh excitement, 
lions giveti lo tlu? young husban l !n Mri». McMann cc 


in reading uud handiwork. 


a record one for the district. 'Ilie ta- 
t.d amount harve.sted in spring and 
winter wheat this season r«.:ulKd 


Prince George a Linguist 


liona giveii lo Uu? young hu.sbaml :n Mr-t. McMann continued; ‘Tve 8 e< n , * maiKcu is xiua icnuenc>, mou 

Hie maltcr of keeping hi.s wife in lua lyoung dudes fxom the city before, pc»*.son.s 

pim e. It was all very humoro’.iH now, ] tlmt ( arno along and Tui.sed the deuce !predicted that ovjnlii.'illy 

itioug®li she rcr 4 i(;:nl)(U*ed iiu'.v iii;gry itjwilli decent girls, raisin' liopeu in cyckipcan nitd 

made her when him beard it sung in j them that makes them scorn honest 

Finl.tiid. Sim iiad once been severely 1 men in their own .station, and it ain’t forehead.” 

wliippod by iier fatb.r for Laying Liii, and i won't stand for it. A minin'! 

ihat if lior man ever d.ircd to strike rump is a rough pliKp but by Doslih A Real Woodeil Woddin'^ 
her she would kill him with a bossa there's some tilings v/eWont stand, 

.'ind throw hi.s body into thc iiood. l-iiit for. Anyone would know a town- JtrlUis (Irooin and MinistiT -Ml \\'ear 


111 . 11 * 1 •. J 1 10.020 bushels on 225 acres an avtr- 

”80 marked is Ud.s tendency, said ’ thialihes .As Interpreter In Fianm 

. . ago lor lx)lh varieties of biuhcls ' ‘ 

• \K I« /xfe-X tx *\ c3r\9v\rA xTi u • -• 1 . v • 


per acre. 

Fiiidii .\iiotlmr .'^li(Toi)(^ 

A new and deadly luicnJic iius licen 


I'or British Na>> 

Frinco (lem'ge, younger sou of King Mliiartl’s IJiilmeiit for r(»l(!>. 

Oeorgo and Queen Mary, has been, — 

posted olllcially as a fully qualified Seals and seu lions arc im iva.-'in;; 

interi»reter In French fur tlxe Btllibh along thc coast of < ali- 


Bells Worth a .Miilio.i 
Ri.\ thousand fox iiells fioni \iiii(.u.s 
lurins in the W'estern riovimes will 
be offered for sale in \Viunlp**g in 
January. They arc valued, ro'igliiy, at 
a million dollars. Tho imlustiy is 
sti-adily expanding in llicse ii'gions. 

Mhiaril'n IJiiliio’iit for 4 oI(l>. 

Seals and scu lions arc imivriyin;; 


f tl. .. tv.. tT'll. ..4 L 9 ^ A » 4 44V44I44V VV 4 lt4«4Vllt4li\4& V44X'.A»4iV4aA4 * 

.l.sc.vc. J > • " Nuvy, ii, whid, ho holds th ■ lai.k of ^'T®'®''® G>®‘® ''®''*‘®'e I®® a®Hous!,v .'Uu- 

asl. ur J to Y nd.n tuiKl. UHlisli miv.il ollice,- ''®®®>- OH®®'®®!®® coiisidc.iu.i the ,,p- 

i ..i .uust haw a knnwledge of Freeh, polntn.out of a hunter to p..r'i.illy . ,v- 


covered on chimiianzees and pndiucs 


Ihe whipping had only eoniirnu d her 1 bred fella like you would mean no 
(kdermlnallon. Sim ho))ed Imr father’good to a girl wlio's only a h.uf-h- 


town- JlrlUis Hruoiii ami Minister .Ml Wear a contagious dl.seusc 
m no' Spruce Venei'r fever. Dr. Vilbeili 

iiUf-h-1 Dressed in spruce veneer garments, ,,.ase. hut recovered, 
io.” Fierlnide Dhmuii uad \Vud'» Howland -- 


* ij v.« I ,1 4 II but this knowledge Ks not always vc)v 

ntugious dl.seuso siimlur to yellow . 

,R.,,_. _ 4 _ 4.1 .1 1 . exten.‘-ive. 


fever. Dr. Villieit contracted the dls- 


The I’rinco of W'ale:( is the best 
French .student among the King’s 
sons, his prolieicnry being due to his 


w(*uUl fall and break his leg or I e ^ sllngin-, after all, and foreign, loo.” ' F.erlnide Dhiuuii uad Wade Howland _ . Fren. h .student among tha King’s 

stnuk by tlie biixt. j a silence f(dl on the room. Helmi, were married by a minister similarly Flour From Alberta sons, his prolicieiicy being due to his 

Helmi dre.’-sed as quickly a.s she ■ wIki had a way of doing lior work spruced up. Tlic bride nnd groom arc lb view of a monUt's expoi L.s itf montiis’ stay u.s .a boy in i* ranee 
could. Her bare little room, glided ^villiout bringing lier mind to it, was | emidoyees of u mill at Hoquiam. ihair by Alberta mills reveaKs g],jp. 1 'Yith the Due de Brotouil, \\h mi ho uc- 
now by the warm sunshine, was ajaroused with the midden jtrk tne Wash., and the ceremony was per- lueiit.s to Ghliiu, KnglunU, Germany, coniidenco essential in 

para liMc to her. hecausc hero rho Ka(l|it.L*D when a train Htop.s. Thc room, formed on a log boom in open air. ; Japan. New Zealand, Houlh America foreigner. He is 

dreamed her glurrlicd dieaiu.i. Hchui’s ■ which a moment befoie had hummed Tho wooden garments were slipped mid the Fnited States. ! Kuud at (icrman, too, an-d t-pcaks 

ladiancc of rplrit covered every dc-* like a factory, vs'us now plunged sud-' over tho lirlde and groom with 7 -- — . . j some Welsh. 


1 monUi s exports of 

•rta mills reveaKs i with the Due (le JJroteuil, wh mi hone- 


good at German, too, and rpcaks 
some Welsh. 

Both King George and Queen Maiy 
speak French lluently. 


Frost Bites 

Minard’s will quicken circu¬ 
lation and prevent further 
troubiiM Alsu eases tho burn¬ 
ing pull). 


MINARD'S 



1713 


d(*nly into tense sllonee. ; cut for their arms, that hands might 

— i Mr.s. McMunn, having iiivcnicd the be joined and apertures were made 
story of Jack’.s sweetheart, prueceded | for eyes and Ups.. 

I to elaborate. j The guests threw sawdust instead 

ji- 1 “There is some talk of your l.riiig-' of rlco and thc honoymoou began on 
a- In’ a wife here uL Kaster, and that a raft of logs floating down Gray’s 
jit will bo the city girl from Edmon- Hi\cr. 

j ton,^ --- 

Jack Doran stood up and tliiew Kudiu Finger rHids 

back his shining hair, HU face was : 'j’he radio photo bas been suceess- 
pulo under liis coat of March tan. 1 fuUy used as a means of transmitting 
“You're a great guesser, Mrs. ^Ic-j qugcr-priiits of criminals. A man held 
Mann,” he said,” but you lutss out in London was suspected of being 
some things. I um going to havo a wanted in C'liicago, so Scotland Yard 
wife before Kaster, but It ia not the I police sent his flngerprints by radio 
—^ girl from Kdmonton. As a matter of | ond learned that they had the right 
I fact, I do not know a girl in KUinon- ^ umij. 


Kl 


is 

EY 




tlS 





iKiDNEV; 


di 

B E T Ei 


3P87 the 


; A venerable old Scot puicha'-cd u 
little radio set and a few' days later 
. his friends asked him Uow' he liked 

I 

it. 

I “W'ell, it’s uw rlcht to listen to,” he 
' replied, ‘ but those bulbs ore nav so 
guid to read by." 

One of our iniaur regrets haM al 
ways been that nobody in the fumily 
’ ^vcnt to medical school long enough 
to know bow' to set tho leg of u card 
table. 

^.Miiianl'N f.liiiuK'iil for Grippe. 


terminate Humu. 

Short of Breath 
Dizzy, Sinking Spells 

COULDN’T WALK FAR 

Mrs. L. A. Oliver, Ornnvillo Ferry, 
N.H., writi’s:—“ f« w yenrs ugo J hu>l 
(li/.zy, binking ^pc!^s mo Kud I coul®l 
hnrjly btuiid up witliout inking lioM 
of bomctliing to su|ip»)rt i.n*, uii'l i 
(■'•uld not >salk uiiy (liuluiu’.i* on aKi iiui.t 
of being 80 8horl of breath. 

“1 had taken a b-t of doctor’s nictl 
iciiie, but it did mo no good, only for 
the time being, no reading in the li.ltb. 
uluiuuuc about 

1 decided tn tiv 







them au'l fotiml 
them to just 
wUat thiy arc rte- 
ommendcil to be, 
and 1 feel that I 
owe in«’ lifo to 
tliom,” 

Price 50r. a l>ox at all dragglstn an<i 
dealers, or mailed direct on receipt . ( 
■ nrico by Tha T. Mdb'aiu Vo., Lluntcd. 
I TorwiiUi, Out. 


I 












THI RAYMOND RBCORi^tfR 
DftTld C. pAtemofi 
Rdttor and Proprietor 
PUBLISHED EVERY PRIDAV 
^ Raymond'H Sole AdTcrtlMna MTin 
Newe Medium 

RAYMOND — - alberta 

Riiherrlptlon Raten 

rannda. per jroar ,,., $2 OO 

Six months tl O'* 

S Polniw, pur your |2,r« 

Six month* $l.2f 

Advert lilnp rate rerd on appMcotloo 


|Jucl|$e Order Strap 
I For Magrath Boy 


Uayinoiul onl IiiihimnIr 

will l>ft ploHRtMl to kin»\v thill, the 
eknlinff rink in now roiuly for pnh- 
lio uRe. Kirotrii'nre itmlnl- 
IihI luul a roinfortnldy l>»'nt<‘f! droH* 
iiiK room prnvidfd 

PrevioiiR to Mil* loonk In the 
wonlhor M?*. V’liiihonljM hotl i 
^tood «h**i*t of ii*o ofJN oriiiK fl’ • h 
tiro rink. Ah Hoon oh the woallior 
porniils an oxoclloiit i<M* Hiirfuci* in 
nnli<*i|inti'r|. 

School cliiMri'ii up in I ) yearn 
will ho ivIIowimI froo nkatiiiK nii 
TnoedayN and TliiirsdayH from I to 
II p. in. Monday.*, WcrlncHdayH 
and KridayH from I to li will hcop. 
en general HkaliiiK a* \m«|] rh Sat 
ur«layH from 2 until I and every 
oveniiiK from S to ]o 

'I'he nalo ol' soHMon’.* tickel hae 
hcfii in<.*renHiii^ this week, and it 
i.H expectod n ffood Hale will Imvn 
hern effected liy the time the ice Ih 
in eonditiun. 

Tlio public is invited to patron¬ 
ize tliia opportunity for k'mmI Hport; 
in fart everyone Hhoiild aim to en¬ 
joy a Koed f-kate iikIiI hero in 
town. 

rial a aro underway for a no\ el 


Meats 


iMeafliiiK «uilfy to forKinK a l|p|^ 
eheipn* for "a. \ormnn TTiirlsnn, 
olMutfratli, a^ed IH ye.irs. was' N 
«i\en HiiRpcmh d Kenlctic** ,,f ten! last 
vencM hy .Mauii-traie Ilnmiltoii rn'Or* 
SnliirdaN tiin?*»iih»' I 


F. T. HolPs Market 


Itlaii' ii \ .inClriiian iias resigned 
her |>osition at Westlake's Jewelry 
Rtore, and left for Raymond to vie- 
it her parents l»efore leaving for 
Utah.—THl)er Times. 


I lh‘ lolineiji^ cnihldloliH Uen' 
laid down hy the mugistrate: (I) 
That ho anhmil to a goor! strap¬ 
ping; tl?) lluit ho (ii srdioo] reg- 
tiliirl.\ lor the winter; (3) that ho 
Ite home at !l p. m. and remain 
there exeepi hy special perniisHion 
from CoiiHtahle KIHs of the A. P. 
P.; ( 1) that ho repfU'l to Constahlo 
KlJis or his siioeessor, every Satur- 
daj'; (r>) to make reHtitiitinn; (6) 
to Come before Magistrate Hamil¬ 
ton on .Saturday, Mnreli .3, to re- 
port a« (o how these conditions 
have hc*ou carried out.—T^etlihridge 
Herald. 


Miss Oladys Martin of Raymond 
returned homo on Christinas Ev© 
to spend the holidays w itii her par¬ 
ents heis'. Mr. and Mrs. Arm¬ 
strong, .Mrs. Martin's inarrit^d 
daughter, also arrived in How Is¬ 
land hy the same train, with their 
children, t'» sp(*nd the holidays 
her*' with <1. H. Martin and family. 

Talsu' Times 


Mrs. C. Nilsson entertained the 
Kensington clnh at a chop suey 
dinner. The table was tastefully 
decorated with sweet peas. One 
new- member was initiated. An eii- 
joyahle time was had b 3 ' all. 


ERVICE 


FOR SALK OH TRADE— 
Single horse buggy. Can Iki seen 
at Mehew's Rlacksinith shop.— 
Apply H. F* Sclineirler, Raymond. 


Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cornahy 
returned Wednesday from a visit 
to Utah. 


Phone 32 


The Opera House company v^ill 
give its anniinl free dunce on Wed¬ 
nesday, January 11. Premiei Or 
chestra in attendance. 


FOR SAFjK—O ne nine 
residiiice, tile hath room 
oonneidion. Two blocks fro 
waj' station, tw»f blocks fro 
temple, thnu* blocks from 
street. Heasonahle pric*o.-- 
J. Parrish, f’nrdston. 


(y ice carnival, to he staged in the 
near future. Fiirilier annoiiiice- 
ment \Vill follow in this paper. 
Join the crowd this winter, bring 
your season ticket, and skate to 
your hearts content. 


RALPH 


W. Organ returned Wednesday’ 
from Calgary where he spent the 
ludirlays. 


Transfer 


Expert Piano Tuning 


T. Geo. Wood and family re¬ 
turned yesterday from Salt Lake 
City where they Hjient a brief visit. 


Character and Individuality In 
Banks 


Voicing, Regulating, Ftepuiring 
All work guaranteed. 

Phone me at 20 

Mrs. Boysons' residence. Raymond 
And 1 will call. 


hi the course jd’ development of a 
hanking hnsiness polieies are formed, 
habits maintained and inetlio^ls prac 
tired which are peculiarly and intimat¬ 
ely connected with the institution that 
gave them birth. It is these things that 
give a hank individual eharaeter tliat 
influences a man in making his financial 
affiliations. In offering oiir services^ 
we Holicit your eiKpiiries regarding 
Standard Hank policies affecting your 
own liiiHinoss, 


Throughout the year eat 


35,000 Tons Beets 
Were Chopped 


Maple Leaf Bread 


AUO. E. MATTHEWS 


The Recorder 


Maple Leaf Bakery 

PHONK H8 


STANDARD BANK 


OF CANA.DA. 

RAYMOND BRANCH—T, L. Hatpin, Manager 


1^11 Cl our cusiomers rair prices 
and a wide variety of the choicest 
meats procurable, both in fresh 

and cured meats 


Makers of 

Distinctive P< 


Plans 1 wo Musical Festivals 


Allison 


PHONE 81 

Piepgrass Meat Market 


Shidio: Hdlrnoral Block 
iffh St. S. - Lethbridge 

Photographs Live Forever” 


Marcelling, 
Hairdressing, 
Etc., Etc 

Miss Nielsen at (he 


While loading 


at our convenient station 
ask us for 


loiii, mu. inc si gui c<.nipi.|.\ j, 
ready toutait (he mill up if 500(1 
ttuiH eau htf pruvi led llecovu.y rf 
the remaining tMuesge <lt pends up 
mi the weather in the early spring. 
Sti far the heets, which are frozen, 
are in gowl shape, and they' could 
he dug and shipiH'd if this cmikl h,. 
dune without t hawing nf ( he rot tf. 

Altogether ahmit Ba.UOO Imm i f 
beets were put llirtMigh tlie in ') 
Uaynioiid, KiigMi’ fxtlMetimi being 
in the neigliliuriioiHt of 70,0u0 1(‘() 
Ih sacks. This oompareN with 41, 
000 tons yielding 88.000 sacks in 
1926.—Lethbridge Herald. 


prices on 


BARBER SHOP 

JESSE SECRIST . PROP 


Scene duriny the I'iping Contest— 

Hanff Springs Hotel in the baric 
ground. 

Inset—Harold E. Key, appointed 
musical director of the C.P.R. 

specimens of the handicrafts at 
which they are skilled. The 
summer solstice is associated with 
foJk-festivals of nearly every Euro¬ 
pean race and mf account of that 
June has been selected as the most 
appropriate time for this trather- 

Festival will he 
devoted to Sea music and will take 
P.ai(' at Vancouver in Pno early 
® V, ^o«t-*ouver is a world port 
notable for the variety of its sea- 
craft with many old seamen familiar 
with sea chanteys. Other Festivals 
at other suitable points are also be- 
jntr planned by the CanadUn 
I acific, which has appointed Harold 
Kustace Key, conductor of the 
Mendelssohn Choir of Montreal, as 
Musical Director of these h'estivals. 
.Mr. Key will also have supervision 


Draying I 

& GENERAL TRANSFER 


Tubes 


Prompt Attention Given 
to All Work 

MODERATE PRICES 


Raymond 

Service Station 

J. D. HALL 

Chrysler Cars Dealer 5 ^ 3 , 


Announcement 

To the Public of Ra>mond 

I 

1 have taken over the agency 
for Maytag WaHhers ficnn Mrs. 
llarker and 1 nuw liave on hand 
a complete etoek of Maytag Wash¬ 
ers and lepair parts. 

If you need one of tlieae famous 
wasliing inacliines see me. Gas or 
electric driven machines on hand. 

Phone for a Demonstration 
to 20* Rayratmd 


Dean Lamb 

Phone 65 or 11 


DR. SAMUEL ASTROF 

PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 


M. E. CHRISTENSEN 

FUNERAL DIRECTOR 
EMBALMER 

All Funeral Supplies 

Successor to Chas. MacKay 
Plioim 2802 

1110 Thii'd Av. So., Lethbridge 

Raymond Phone 13 


G. W. LEECH, M. I)., C. M 

PHYSICIAN und SURGEON 


(Poet Office Building) 
Raymond 


w *iver HiMuiott’a Store 
OHice phone (ifi. 
hMsidoiK*** phom- 1 IP 


—Office Honrs— 

12 2—6 7—8 
Phone 127 


and Ui display I highest tlMie of efficisney.